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Are Multi-stakeholder Platforms Effective Approaches to Agri-food Sustainability? Towards Better Assessment

journal contribution
posted on 2025-12-02, 13:41 authored by Jodie ThorpeJodie Thorpe, Thom Sprenger, Joost Guijt, Darian Stibbe
<p dir="ltr">Multi-stakeholder platforms (MSPs) have proved popular as network governance approaches to align business, government, NGOs and other stakeholders in dealing with complex sustainability challenges in the agri-food sector. However, secretariats, members, stakeholders and funders rarely possess good information regarding MSP effectiveness, leaving them in the dark regarding how best to allocate resources and expectations towards different MSPs or MSP activities. This paper explores the feasibility of generating better and more timely evidence of the effectiveness of MSPs as agents of agri-food system transformation. It is based on the findings of action research with two agri-food MSPs: Bonsucro and the Farm to Market Alliance (FtMA), which used a theory-based methodology to understand progress towards intended results. Through critical questioning of their theory of change alongside multiple sources of evidence, the approach generated new insights regarding MSP effectiveness. The findings also offer lessons on three critical challenges in assessing network governance forms like MSPs: causal inference, goal attainment, and the potential for scale. The findings have implications for improving MSPs’ own monitoring in order to adaptively manage and improve their effectiveness, and for generating meaningful evidence of MSP contribution to more sustainable food systems.</p>

Funding

Rockefeller Foundation

History

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Citation

Thorpe, J. Sprenger, T., Guijt, J. and Stibbe, D. (2021). Are multi-stakeholder platforms effective approaches to agri-food sustainability? Towards better assessment, International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, DOI: 10.1080/14735903.2021.1921485

Volume

20

Issue

2

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Copyright holder

© Informa UK Limited

Pagination

168-183

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