FeaturesSpoke 01

The complexity of food environments addressed with participatory methods: the mini-doc from the four-day workshop of Spoke 1.

Spoke 1 organized a four-day workshop on the tools and methods of participatory research dedicated to young researchers.

Topics

Living labParticipatory methodsFood environments
  1. Home

     / 
  2. Magazine

     / 
  3. The complexity of food environments addressed with participatory methods: the mini-doc from the four-day workshop of Spoke 1.

Published: July 20, 2024
Share:
Scientific research plays a primary role in supporting the sustainable development of agri-food supply chains because it can ultimately guide policies based on evidence and measure their results. However, its impact will be truly effective only if transdisciplinary approaches and participatory methods are applied, directly involving local stakeholders. For this reason, Spoke 1 of OnFoods organized a four-day workshop on the tools and methods of participatory research dedicated to young researchers.

"When studying and seeking solutions for food environments, we often deal with 'wicked problems,'" says Professor Alessio Cavicchi from the University of Pisa, "that is, problems that may never find the solution we envision, and especially problems that do not have solutions valid for everyone, the so-called 'one size fits all solution.'

The application of participatory methods — typical of human values centered design — in the agri-food field is crucial for addressing its complex challenges. These methods, which place the needs and experiences of end users at the center of the decision-making process, can indeed foster an integrated and collaborative approach throughout the entire agri-food supply chain.

"Traditionally, the agri-food sector," says Filippo Arfini, coordinator of Spoke 1, "has been analyzed in distinct segments: agricultural, industrial, distributive, and finally, the consumer. However, thinking of these segments as interconnected nodes would allow for the development of more effective coordination mechanisms. Through a participatory approach, innovative solutions can be created to reflect the real needs of all the actors involved, promoting both top-down actions, led by industry or policy, and bottom-up actions, where consumers organize themselves to improve product quality and reduce costs. This method not only enhances the sustainability and resilience of the sector but also stimulates continuous and constructive dialogue among all participants in the supply chain."

To put a participatory approach to research into practice, it is necessary for young researchers to adopt approaches, attitudes, and working methods based on listening, empathy, systems thinking, iteration, and rapid prototyping of ideas. Once they have familiarized themselves with these methods, they should apply them concretely in their research.

On these foundations the Tenuta Lab was born: a work program promoted by Spoke 1 of OnFoods, which took place at the Suvignano farm from June 17 to 20.

Four days of study, research, and co-creation involving PhD students, research fellows, researchers, and professors in a program that encouraged participatory training and collaborative design, fostering an attitude towards co-designing innovative and transdisciplinary solutions.

"The idea of this program was to stimulate the researcher’s creativity," says Sonia Massari, a researcher at the University of Pisa, "to take them beyond predefined schemes and trajectories, breaking down disciplinary differences while also trying to open new channels with the stakeholders they work with."

Living Labs are the most suitable methodological expression to scientifically develop this idea of “listening and action” research; they are shared work environments and moments where co-creation is stimulated among different perspectives on a problem: for example, those of companies, science, governments, and policymakers, but especially those of citizens and communities.

New skills are needed—that are far from being merely "soft" — to manage the dynamics emerging from the convergence of many and different viewpoints. Hence the need for a full immersion dedicated to the young researchers of Spoke 1, who will one day apply these same methods in their regions and research.

The setup of this training was different from the usual approach in Italian academia: instead of traditional lectures, a peer-to-peer format was used, where all the young researchers contributed with their knowledge and skills.

Chiara Cerbone, a research fellow in Comparative Public Law at the University of Parma, noted that the participatory approach was a pleasant novelty in her experience as a jurist: "I return from Suvignano with a wealth of experiences that I believe I can apply in my field of research, which historically has some difficulties in interfacing with the practical aspects of the regulatory models it deals with."

The idea is to form a "new researcher" who, in addition to the vertical competencies of their discipline, can also develop skills and abilities to engage with "the other" from different disciplines.

"The approaches we experimented with in Suvignano," comments Raffaele Pasquariello, a PhD student in 'Mind, Gender and Languages' at the University of Naples Federico II, "give us the tools to overcome not only disciplinary but also cultural barriers among us researchers. Coming into contact with scholars from agricultural, economic, medical, scientific fields, etc., always gives us a different perspective, and interdisciplinarity is something that must be earned precisely because it is very difficult to put into practice."

A mini-documentary was produced from the Suvignano Tenuta Lab experience, created by the communication, design, and development company Dinamo, together with the researchers who participated in the four-day workshop.

Partecipants and Acknowledgments

Participants in the workshop:
Filippo Arfini, Alessio Cavicchi, Michele Maccari, Davide D’Ascoli, Bastian Goldel, Tarek Allali, Belinda Borrello, Chiara Cerbone, Sabrina Arcuri, Giovanni Ottomano Palmisano, Sonia Massari, Lucia Viganego, Giulio Cascone, Irene Bassi, Abigail Fagbohun, Annapia Ferrara, Chiara Mignani, Teresa Tugliani, Rungsaran Wongprawmas, Audrey Cavalieri, Benedetta Mura, Raffaele Pasquariello, Giulia Gallo, Roberta Gravagno, Marianna Guareschi

Acknowledgments to local entities:
Giovanni Sordi, Ente Terre Regionali Toscane; Giacomo Baffetti, Agronomist at Tenuta Suvignano; Giovanna Vannetti, Libera; Davide Ricci, Mayor of the Municipality of Murlo; Gabriele Berni, Mayor of the Municipality of Monteroni d’Arbia; Franco Rossi, Eroica; Laura Scafetta, Terra Eroica; Maddalena Sanfilippo, Tempio del Brunello; Azienda Agricola Pieve a Salti; Roberto Barbi and family, Azienda Agricola Barbi; Valentina Pascucci, Mondomangione; Catiuscia Marcantoni, Tenuta Suvignano; Letizia Cosci, Museo della Mezzadria di Buonconvento; Elisabetta Bargagna, ASTI Srl; Alessandra Meoni, European University Alliance Circle U, University of Pisa

Video production:
Dinamo srl, communication management; Milo Adami, direction, shooting, and editing; Giulio Burroni, writing and coordination.

Giulio Burroni

Communication manager

Specialist in Communication and Project Management with over 8 years of experience in agency work. Currently involved in communication, branding, and design projects within the public administration, research institutions, and university sectors

This blog post is related to

Spoke 01

Global Sustainability

Fair food market for healthy citizens

Lead organisation

Spoke leaderFilippo Arfini

You might be interested in...

NewsOct 11, 2024
The Evolution of Agricultural Economics Education and Research on Living Labs

InterviewJul 13, 2024
Sustainability and social innovation in local areas also rely on local agri-food supply chains

EventApr 26, 2024
Legal Issues for a Sustainable Agrifood Chain: the FLAN Conference 2024

FeaturesMay 4, 2023
Sustainable food production amid systemic limitations and the rising demand for food.

EventSep 17, 2024
OnFoods at Capri for the SIDEA Conference, Italian Society of Agricultural Economics

FeaturesJul 9, 2024
Formal and informal actors in the supply chain: all at the same table with the SCIN-GO project, to design more equitable and sustainable food environments.

NewsNov 22, 2023
The University of Parma launches the first cascade funding call for collaborative research projects on the themes of Global Sustainability.

WorkshopSep 12, 2024
Bridging the gap between tradition and innovation: novel food and feed at the UniMi workshop on 19th September

EventJun 13, 2024
Innovative Research Practices: Empowering Early Career Scientists in Global Sustainability

FeaturesMay 8, 2023
Sustainable Food Procurement policies to improve the production and adoption of healthy diets.

InterviewJul 15, 2024
University Campuses as Models of Food Environments: The PPP-URB Project towards Sustainable Public Food Procurement

ReportMay 24, 2024
Food Systems research takes center stage in Mantova: highlights from the Food&Science Festival

FeaturesMay 8, 2023
The sustainability of food environments, amid value chains and eating habits: the GEN_YOU project