5 resultados para food practices
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Il tema affrontato nella presente ricerca sono le trasformazioni intercorse nella vita quotidiana tra il III e il I secolo a.C. in due colonie latine, Ariminum e Bononia, attraverso le evidenze archeologiche. Vengono indagate su scala locale le conseguenze di un fenomeno di grande portata, la colonizzazione romano-latina, mettendo a fuoco le forme dell’abitare, le tradizioni artigianali e le pratiche alimentari. La principale base documentaria sono le testimonianze archeologiche di edilizia domestica e le ceramiche, rinvenute nelle aree di abitato di Rimini e Bologna e nei territori limitrofi. Per cogliere a pieno le trasformazioni intercorse, vengono passate in rassegna le principali caratteristiche del popolamento, dell'architettura domestica e delle ceramiche precedenti la colonizzazione romano-latina. Le due colonie, le abitazioni e le ceramiche sono considerate, inoltre, nel contesto territoriale più ampio, volgendo lo sguardo anche all'area medio-adriatica e alla Cispadana. Allo stesso tempo, sono continui i riferimenti all'Italia medio-tirrenica, poiché permettono di comprendere molte delle evidenze archeologiche e dei processi storici in esame. Il primo capitolo tratta della colonizzazione romano-latina, calata nelle realtà di Rimini e Bologna. La domanda a cui si vuole rispondere è: chi erano gli abitanti delle due colonie? A questo proposito, si affronta anche la questione degli insediamenti precoloniali. Nel secondo capitolo si analizzano le abitazioni urbane. Quali furono le principali innovazioni nell'architettura domestica introdotte dalla colonizzazione? Come cambiarono le forme dell’abitare ad Ariminum e Bononia in età repubblicana? Il terzo capitolo si concentra sulla ceramica per la preparazione e il consumo del cibo nei contesti di abitato. Come cambiarono nelle due città le pratiche alimentari e le tradizioni artigianali utilizzate nella produzione di ceramiche? L'ultimo capitolo discute alcuni quadri teorici applicati ai fenomeni descritti nei capitoli precedenti (romanizzazione, acculturazione, identità, globalizzazione). L'ultimo paragrafo entra nel merito delle trasformazioni avvenute nella vita quotidiana di Ariminum e Bononia.
Resumo:
Traceability is often perceived by food industry executives as an additional cost of doing business, one to be avoided if possible. However, a traceability system can in fact comply the regulatory requirements, increase food safety and recall performance, improving marketing performances and, as well as, improving supply chain management. Thus, traceability affects business performances of firms in terms of costs and benefits determined by traceability practices. Costs and benefits affect factors such as, firms’ characteristics, level of traceability and ,lastly, costs and benefits perceived prior to traceability implementation. This thesis was undertaken to understand how these factors are linked to affect the outcome of costs and benefits. Analysis of the results of a plant level survey of the Italian ichthyic processing industry revealed that processors generally adopt various level of traceability while government support appears to increase the level of traceability and the expectations and actual costs and benefits. None of the firms’ characteristics, with the exception of government support, influences costs and level of traceability. Only size of firms and level of QMS certifications are linked with benefits while precision of traceability increases benefits without affecting costs. Finally, traceability practices appear due to the request from “external“ stakeholders such as government, authority and customers rather than “internal” factors (e.g. improving the firm management) while the traceability system does not provide any added value from the market in terms of price premium or market share increase.
Resumo:
Agri-food supply chains extend beyond national boundaries, partially facilitated by a policy environment that encourages more liberal international trade. Rising concentration within the downstream sector has driven a shift towards “buyer-driven” global value chains (GVCs) extending internationally with global sourcing and the emergence of multinational key economic players that compete with increase emphasis on product quality attributes. Agri-food systems are thus increasingly governed by a range of inter-related public and private standards, both of which are becoming a priori mandatory, especially in supply chains for high-value and quality-differentiated agri-food products and tend to strongly affect upstream agricultural practices, firms’ internal organization and strategic behaviour and to shape the food chain organization. Notably, increasing attention has been given to the impact of SPS measures on agri-food trade and notably on developing countries’ export performance. Food and agricultural trade is the vital link in the mutual dependency of the global trade system and developing countries. Hence, developing countries derive a substantial portion of their income from food and agricultural trade. In Morocco, fruit and vegetable (especially fresh) are the primary agricultural export. Because of the labor intensity, this sector (especially citrus and tomato) is particularly important in terms of income and employment generation, especially for the female laborers hired in the farms and packing houses. Hence, the emergence of agricultural and agrifood product safety issues and the subsequent tightening of market requirements have challenged mutual gains due to the lack of technical and financial capacities of most developing countries.
Resumo:
Concerns of Thai consumers on food safety have been recently increasing, especially in urban areas and for fresh produce because food safety scandals, such as chemical residues on fresh produce (e.g., cabbage) still frequently occur. The Thai government tried to meet consumer needs by imposing in the domestic market a stronger regulation aimed at increasing the baseline level of food safety assurance and by introducing a voluntary standard (based on Good Agricultural Practices or GAPs and known as Q-GAP) and the related food safety label (i.e., Q mark). However, since standards and regulations are weakly implemented in the domestic market compared to exported products, there is still a lack of Thai consumers’ confidence in the safety of local food products. In this work the current situation of GAPs adoption in Thai fresh produce production is analysed. Furthermore, it is studied whether Thai consumers place value on food safety labels available on the market, to know whether consumer demand could drive the market of certified safer products. This study contains three essays: 1) a review of the literature, 2) a qualitative study on stakeholders' perception toward GAPs adoption and 3) a quantitative study, aimed at analysing consumers' preferences and willingness-to-pay for food safety labels on fresh produce using a discrete choice experiment. This dissertation contributes to the economics of quality assurance and labelling, specifically addressing GAPs and food safety label in the fresh produce supply chain. Results show that Q-GAP could be effectively used to improve food safety in Thai domestic market, but its credibility should be improved. Stakeholder’s awareness toward food safety issues and the delivery of reliable and sound information are crucial. Thai consumers are willing to pay a premium price for food safety labelled produce over unlabelled ones. Implications for both government and business decision-makers are discussed.
Resumo:
The challenges of the current global food systems are often framed around feeding the world's growing population while meeting sustainable development for future generations. Globalization has brought to a fragmentation of food spaces, leading to a flexible and mutable supply chain. This poses a major challenge to food and nutrition security, affecting also rural-urban dynamics in territories. Furthermore, the recent crises have highlighted the vulnerability to shocks and disruptions of the food systems and the eco-system due to the intensive management of natural, human and economic capital. Hence, a sustainable and resilient transition of the food systems is required through a multi-faceted approach that tackles the causes of unsustainability and promotes sustainable practices at all levels of the food system. In this respect, a territorial approach becomes a relevant entry point of analysis for the food system’s multifunctionality and can support the evaluation of sustainability by quantifying impacts associated with quantitative methods and understanding the territorial responsibility of different actors with qualitative ones. Against this background the present research aims to i) investigate the environmental, costing and social indicators suitable for a scoring system able to measure the integrated sustainability performance of food initiatives within the City/Region territorial context; ii) develop a territorial assessment framework to measure sustainability impacts of agricultural systems; and iii) define an integrated methodology to match production and consumption at a territorial level to foster a long-term vision of short food supply chains. From a methodological perspective, the research proposes a mixed quantitative and qualitative research method. The outcomes provide an in-depth view into the environmental and socio-economic impacts of food systems at the territorial level, investigating possible indicators, frameworks, and business strategies to foster their future sustainable development.