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Growing Organic Disclaimer, IFOAM hosts the 'Growing Organic' Pages in the interest of offering an information gathering resource for developing organic sectors. These pages represent the myriad interests and resources of the Organic Movement in its full diversity and should not be specifically identified with the corporate identity of IFOAM but should be considered a communal resource to be changed and edited continually. The inclusion of a link to a third party website from the IFOAM website should not be understood as an endorsement of the organization, nor is it an endorsement of any commercial product or service mentioned or advised on any of the sites. IFOAM is not liable for defamatory, offensive, or illegal conduct of other users or third parties, nor for risk of injury. IFOAM continually checks and updates the information provided on its website. Despite thorough checks certain data may have changed since posting on the site. The federation can therefore not assume any liability or issue any guarantee for the information provided being current, correct or complete. The same applies to all other web pages to which a person might be directed by hyperlinks. IFOAM continually checks and updates the information provided on its website. Despite thorough checks certain data may have changed since posting on the site. IFOAM can therefore not assume any liability or issue any guarantee for the information provided being current, correct or complete. The same applies to all other web pages to which a person might be directed by hyperlinks. IFOAM is not responsible for the content of the web pages reached via this type of link. IFOAM's name and logo are protected. Therefore it may not be reproduced without the prior consent of IFOAM. The content and structure of the IFOAM website is under copyright protection. As the world wide adoption of Organic Agriculture is IFOAM's goal, we encourage you and grant permission to use the information of this website for that purpose. When doing so we expect you to give credits to IFOAM in the following way: "(c) IFOAM, Charles-de-Gaulle-Str.5, 53113 Bonn, Germany, www.ifoam.org" | |
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The Sustainable Organic Agriculture Action Network (SOAAN) Description and Objectives The Sustainable Organic Agriculture Action Network (SOAAN) exists to develop a reference and program that positions organic agriculture and its related supply chains as a holistic, sustainable approach to the production of food and fiber for all of human society. Working together as an alliance of likeminded organizations, members can use the SOAAN’s outputs to jointly and individually impact the world’s practices around the production and consumption of agricultural products. Through these efforts, good organic production can become a real and significant institutional alternative to conventional agriculture and its related policies, and members of SOAAN can be seen as increasingly desirable partners. Scope The scope of the SOAAN’s work encompasses all aspects of agricultural production and downstream product supply chains, centering around the products themselves, but also taking into consideration the infrastructure on which their production, distribution, and consumption depends. In addition to these ecological aspects, the human aspect of all of these interactions is taken into consideration. All together, SOAAN’s efforts reflect and respect the IFOAM Principles of Organic Agriculture. Benefits and Beneficiaries of SOAAN's work: The organic movement sees the stewardship of the environment as the only long-term basis for sustainability, the core around which other principles of fairness and prosperity must be built. Some people may see organic as the “top,” but we say that it needs to be seen as the base, the foundation on which sound, sustainable systems are built. SOAAN will enable us to clearly identify the areas where Organic Agriculture is truly sustainable and the areas where we need to do more. It is important that Organic Agriculture is seen as continuously improving so that we continue to be seen as the leaders in sustainable agriculture. In its initial phase of existence – until about March 2013 – SOAAN has an ambitious agenda, namely the creation and testing of three main pieces of work:
These products can be used for a variety of purposes, including:
Envisioning the longer-term: We conceive a diverse and rich network of supporters of the organic mission and movement, sharing common information and common tools across an open-source, practical platform that leads and pulls organic production to the mainstream of agriculture and value chains. It will foster innovation within the movement and make bridges to those still on the outside. SOAAN’s products are aimed at a wide range of beneficiaries, from farmers on the ground to top-level policy makers, from traders to researchers. We are designing the products of SOAAN’s work to be accessible from all positions within and around the value chain. The vision of SOAAN is collaborative, transformative, and far-reaching. Working together as an alliance of likeminded organizations, members of the network can use the SOAAN’s outputs to jointly and individually impact the world’s practices around the production and consumption of agricultural products. Through these efforts, good organic production can come to be seen as a real and significant institutional alternative to conventional agriculture and its related policies, and members of SOAAN can be seen as increasingly desirable partners. |
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IFOAM - International Federation of Organic Agriculture | info@ifoam.org |
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