Pastoralism

A pastoral system is a complex structure emerging from interactions of raising livestock and utilizing natural resources, in which breeders share production purposes, traditions and cultural values. Pastoralism is a land-based productive activity, where extensive grazing is substantial but includes

  1. a gradient of intensification even within particular systems in the use of rangelands (e.g., permanent natural and semi-natural grasslands, shrublands) and cultivated pastures,
  2. different species (e.g. cattle, sheep, goats, camels, pigs, horses),
  3. livestock movements (sedentary, transhumance, trasterminance),
  4. use of salaried labour and fixed/variable capital at different degrees.

PASTINNOVA encompasses this rich variety in the Mediterranean but focuses on smallholders maintaining ‘pastoral identities’ by making sustainable use of local resources at risk of abandonment (i.e. grazing resources and ecological knowledge) and providing examples of circular economy (soil quality, interplay crop-livestock, local breeds with low requirements in antibiotics and more resilient to disease etc) for centuries and an alternative to dominant intensive livestock.

Pastoral agro-ecosystems in PASTINNOVA provide a wide array of ES and share three features: agro-ecological constraints; traditional socio-cultural roles; potential to foster sustainable entrepreneurship. The value chain of pastoral products (VCP) is “The full range of people and organizations and their coordinated value-adding activities that produce and transform livestock products that are sold to final consumers in a manner that is profitable throughout, has broad-based benefits for society and shows neutral or positive impacts on natural resources. It fully considers the interaction between its components, and the physical, social and economic enabling environment”, where the strategic choices of actors creating, delivering and capturing value form ‘business models’.