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Dive into the research topics where Arlette S. Saint Ville is active.

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Featured researches published by Arlette S. Saint Ville.


Regional Environmental Change | 2015

Addressing food and nutrition insecurity in the Caribbean through domestic smallholder farming system innovation

Arlette S. Saint Ville; Gordon M. Hickey; Leroy E. Phillip

Abstract Smallholder farmers are key actors in addressing the food and nutrition insecurity challenges facing the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), while also minimizing the ecological footprint of food production systems. However, fostering innovation in the region’s smallholder farming systems will require more decentralized, adaptive, and heterogeneous institutional structures and approaches than presently exist. In this paper, we review the conditions that have been undermining sustainable food and nutrition security in the Caribbean, focusing on issues of history, economy, and innovation. Building on this discussion, we then argue for a different approach to agricultural development in the Small Island Developing States of the CARICOM that draws primarily on socioecological resilience and agricultural innovation systems frameworks. Research needs are subsequently identified, including the need to better understand how social capital can facilitate adaptive capacity in diverse smallholder farming contexts; how formal and informal institutions interact in domestic agriculture and food systems to affect collaboration, co-learning, and collective action; how social actors might better play bridging and linking roles that can support mutual learning, collaboration, and reciprocal knowledge flows; and the reasons underlying past innovation failures and successes to facilitate organizational learning.


Regional Environmental Change | 2015

Factors affecting the innovation potential of smallholder farmers in the Caribbean Community

Kristen Lowitt; Gordon M. Hickey; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Kaywana Raeburn; Theresa Thompson-Colón; Sonia Laszlo; Leroy E. Phillip

Abstract The need for domestic smallholder farming systems to better support food and nutrition security in the Caribbean is a pressing challenge. The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) faces complex socio-ecological challenges related to historical legacies of plantation agriculture, small population sizes, geographic isolation, jurisdictional diversity, and proneness to natural disasters, all of which underscore the importance of fostering system-wide innovation potential. This paper explores the factors that are impacting the innovation potential of smallholder farming households in four CARICOM small island developing states (St. Lucia, St. Kitts-Nevis, Trinidad and Tobago, and Guyana) using data collected through producer household surveys, focus groups, and key informant interviews. Results indicate that a systemic lack of access to finance, markets, and knowledge networks is perceived as limiting smallholder innovation potential in the region. Compounding these challenges was a pervasive lack of trust reported between actors and institutions throughout the agricultural innovation system, hindering the potential for collective action. Our findings point to the need for more decentralized governance approaches that are capable of establishing stronger relationships between actors and institutions to enhance knowledge flows in support of regional rural development and food and nutrition security objectives.


Food Security | 2016

Exploring the role of social capital in influencing knowledge flows and innovation in smallholder farming communities in the Caribbean

Arlette S. Saint Ville; Gordon M. Hickey; Uli Locher; Leroy E. Phillip

This paper presents the results of an exploratory study into how different forms of social capital embedded within community-based social networks may affect innovation in smallholder farming systems to better support food security in the Caribbean. Focusing on two rural communities in the small island developing nation of Saint Lucia, our results indicate the strong presence of interpersonal agricultural knowledge networks operating to: 1) facilitate farmer-to-farmer knowledge exchange; 2) increase farmer access to information; and 3) connect farmers to sources of support. In both communities, ‘peer farmers’ were reported as being the primary source of new agricultural knowledge for farmers, with government ‘extension officers’ the secondary source. Comparative social network analysis reveals how different forms of social capital within the two agricultural knowledge networks can affect self-reported farmer innovation in different contexts. Based on these findings we identify a number of opportunities for policy initiatives to better support, coordinate and enhance innovation opportunities among smallholder farmers in the Caribbean with a view to building their adaptive capacity in the face of environmental change. The findings provide important evidence and insights relevant to the governance of domestic agricultural systems and regional food security programming in the Caribbean.


Regional Studies, Regional Science | 2016

Challenges and opportunities for more integrated regional food security policy in the Caribbean Community

Kristen Lowitt; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Caroline S. M. Keddy; Leroy E. Phillip; Gordon M. Hickey

Abstract The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has recognized regional integration as an important development strategy for addressing the unique vulnerabilities of its member small island developing states (SIDS). Food security in the Caribbean is a fundamental social and ecological challenge in which the dynamics of regional integration are increasingly playing out. CARICOM members have subsequently identified a number of shared food security problems and have endorsed regional goals and approaches to address them; however, progress towards solutions has been slow. Recognizing that evidence-based studies on the potential factors limiting sustained progress are lacking, we undertook a comparative policy analysis to understand better the various approaches and framings of food security at national and regional levels with a view to assessing coherence. We identify considerable divergence in how regional and local policy institutions frame and approach food security problems in CARICOM and then identify ways through which the policy integration objectives for enhanced regional food security might be progressed, with a particular focus on social learning.


Food Policy | 2017

How do stakeholder interactions influence national food security policy in the Caribbean? : the case of Saint Lucia

Arlette S. Saint Ville; Gordon M. Hickey; Leroy E. Phillip


Regional Environmental Change | 2015

Environmental change and food security: the special case of small island developing states

Kristen Lowitt; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Patsy Lewis; Gordon M. Hickey


The International Journal of the Commons | 2017

A framework for analyzing institutional gaps in natural resource governance

H. M. Tuihedur Rahman; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Andrew M. Song; June Y.T. Po; Elsa Berthet; Jeremy R. Brammer; Nicolas D. Brunet; Lingaraj G. Jayaprakash; Kristen Lowitt; Archi Rastogi; Graeme Reed; Gordon M. Hickey


Journal of Rural Studies | 2017

Institutional analysis of food and agriculture policy in the Caribbean: The case of Saint Lucia

Arlette S. Saint Ville; Gordon M. Hickey; Leroy E. Phillip


Archive | 2014

Exploring the factors influencing agricultural innovation and adaptive capacity among smallholder farmers in the Caribbean

Kristen Lowitt; Gordon M. Hickey; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Kaywana Raeburn; Theresa Thompson-Colón; Sonia Laszlo; Leroy E. Phillip


Archive | 2018

The Obesity Pandemic and Food Insecurity in Developing Countries

Kristen Lowitt; Katherine Gray-Donald; Gordon M. Hickey; Arlette S. Saint Ville; Isabella Francis-Granderson; Chandra A. Madramootoo; Leroy E. Phillip

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