This article presents a case study of the solidarity economy in Italy: the Italian G.A.S. - Gruppi di Acquisto Solidale, which I translate as Solidarity Purchase Groups. GAS are often conceptualized as "alternative food networks". Beyond this categorization, I highlight their novelty in relational, political, and ecological terms, with respect to their capacity to forge new partnerships between consumers and producers. Introducing an ethnographic study that I have developed in a recent monograph (Grasseni 2013), I dwell here in particular on how the solidarity economy is embedded in practice. I argue that gasistas' provisioning activism is something different to mere "ethical consumerism." Activists use the notion of "co-production" to describe their engagement as a concurrent rethinking of the social, economic, and ecological aspects of provisioning. Building also on a quantitative survey of the GAS movement in northern Italy, I pursue an ethnographic understanding of "co-production." I argue that producers and consumers in GAS networks "co-produce" both economic value and ecological knowledge, while re-embedding their provisioning practice in mutuality and relationality.
CITATION STYLE
Grasseni, C. (2014). Seeds of trust. Italy’s Gruppi di Acquisto Solidale (Solidarity Purchase Groups). Journal of Political Ecology, 21(1), 178–192. https://doi.org/10.2458/v21i1.21131
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.