María Teresa Findji’s research while affiliated with Fundación Cardiovascular de Colombia and other places

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Publications (1)


Size of agricultural production units (APU) by rank, year, and number of producers.
Number of FPU with other crops.
Coffee areas in production and growth.
Number of FPU by number of family members.
Family labor (permanent, temporary).
Elements for Re-Designing Sustainability Strategies with Groups of Small Coffee Producers
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2023

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77 Reads

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3 Citations

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María Teresa Findji

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José Fernando Grass

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Consuelo Montes

Small producers are participating more and more in the debate on moving towards sustainable agriculture. Natural resources are given as the main reason, but these producers also base their decisions on the need to produce enough food to feed their families and strengthen local economies. During the transition, however, economic and productive sustainability represents a real challenge for the producers and the organizations to which they belong. This study analyzes the experiences of coffee-growing families located in the department of Cauca, Colombia. These families opted for a transition from conventional management to certified organic coffee production while continuing—within the framework of the agroecological transition—to produce and market food. The study aim consisted of identifying those factors that favor or pose a threat to remaining within the certification, as well as the degree of importance of these factors as they relate to the sustainability of the family production units (FPU). To achieve this, a qualitative research approach was adopted that required collaborative work tools involving producers, technicians, and researchers. Limiting factors to holding the organic certification, as identified from the results, were the precariousness of the FPUs, their dispersion and their heterogeneity, limited access to the supply chain, and the requirements for labor, while factors that favored transition were related to the extensive knowledge of the FPUs, their capacity for productive and economic diversification, the organization of collective work and the revitalization of other productive initiatives that achieve the commitment of different groups of producers. The contribution of this study lies in helping to re-design sustainability strategies with groups of small producers of coffee.

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Citations (1)


... These studies indicate that women while making progress in asserting their agency and managing their coffee income, face challenges such as the disproportionate burden of domestic work, the need for technical support, and the necessity of a more inclusive social and political environment hindering their participation and leadership in coffee organizations. Branch 2: Certification and Sustainability: Pathways for Rural Coffee Enterprises in Latin America Risueño et al. (2023) shed light on the challenges coffee producers face in the Cauca department in Colombia as they pursue certifications, highlighting social, economic, and cultural constraints within family production units in coffee-growing areas stemming from stringent quality standards imposed by organic certification bodies; the authors argue for shade-grown coffee as a sustainable and profitable choice, offering economic benefits while preserving the environment and coffee quality. ...

Reference:

Organic coffee production: mapping trends through bibliometric analysisProducción de café orgánico: mapeando tendencias a través del análisis bibliométrico
Elements for Re-Designing Sustainability Strategies with Groups of Small Coffee Producers