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Protected geographical indications: Institutional roles in food systems governance and rural development
Affiliation:1. Rural Economy Development Programme, Teagasc, Athenry, Co. Galway, Ireland;2. School of Geography and Archaeology, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland;1. Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Colorado State University, United States;2. Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry, University of Firenze, Italy;1. Department of Economics and Management, University of Florence, Via delle Pandette 9, 50127, Florence, Italy;2. Institute of Economics, Geography and Demography (IEGD), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Albasanz 26-28, 28037, Madrid, Spain;3. Department of economics and Management, University of Florence, Via delle Pandette 9, 50127, Florence, Italy;4. Gorgopotamou 7, 59100 Veria, Greece;1. School of Business Administration, Jiangxi University of Finance & Economics, Shuanggangdong Avenue, Nanchang City, Jiangxi Province 330013, China;2. Faculty of Business, Environment and Society, Coventry University, Priory Street, Coventry CV1 5FB, UK;3. Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience, Coventry University, Priory Street, Coventry CV1 5FB, UK;1. Research Laboratory on Livestock Development, National Institute for Agricultural Research, Quartier Grossetti, 20250, Corte, France;2. UMR Activités, Produits, Territoires, National Institute for Agricultural Research, Campus AgroParisTech, 1 Avenue Lucien Bretignières, Batiment EGEL, 78850, Thiverval–Grignon, France
Abstract:
This paper examines the importance of national-level institutional arrangements for promoting the EU’s Protected Geographic Indication scheme (PGI). Taking the example of Ireland, for which PGI designations remain comparatively low, it explores whether the approach to providing institutional supports to the PGI scheme is influenced by top-down technocratic governance structures that pertain to food safety and quality certification that encompass the broader operating environment for food production in Ireland. Although the regulation of food safety and quality certification are distinct remits to the administration of the PGI scheme, in the Irish context the same institutional bodies are involved in governance of both. Using a discourse analysis interpretative framework, this paper draws on interviews with Irish producer group members and institutional representatives to examine how governance of the PGI scheme reflects management perspectives and practices more in keeping with a regulatory environment for food safety and quality than with development of place-based food product links. It suggests that incentives to avail of the PGI scheme as a means of realising value-added for producers are not well established because they require the development of more subjective, context-dependent processes and practices linked to geographical place and place identity. These are not easily accommodated under current institutional arrangements that also incorporate food safety and quality remits because these are in turn strongly established through nationally and internationally recognised systems of regulation and benchmarking. The findings point to the benefits to be gained from a more layered governance structure for PGI; devolving operation of the scheme to relevant regional and local development organisations that possess the expertise and relevant local knowledge to (a) incentivise the formation of producer groups, and (b) prioritise mentoring and support for PGI concept development as a clearer reflection of bottom-up rural sustainability policy.
Keywords:Protected Geographic Indications  Rural development  Food quality  Food safety  Institutional roles  Food policy
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