EventSpoke 01Mar 14, 2025WP 1.1

Mirta Alessandrini presents her book "Regulating Short Food Supply Chains in the EU" at the University of Bari, Spoke 1

This volume presents a thorough analysis of the concept and role of Short Food Supply Chains (SFSCs) within the EU legal framework with a two-fold aim. It shows the pitfalls of the current legal scenario and provides a new conceptualisation for SFSCs under EU law.

Susanna Bonelli

Communication specialist

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Published: March 12, 2025
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On 14 March, at the University of Bari, Mirta Alessandrini’s book Regulating Short Food Supply Chains in the EU will be presented. This event is part of the research activities of Spoke 1, within the project Definition of an Ethical Legal Model of Sustainable Food System Relationships (ETHI_LEG), for which Prof. Irene Canfora is the Principal Investigator.

Following the institutional greetings from Carmela Ventrella, coordinator of the degree programmes, and Vito Leccese, coordinator of the PhD programme in Rights and Protections in Globalised MarketsIrene Canfora will introduce the author and engage in a discussion together with Laura Costantino and Domenico Cristallo.

Mirta Alessandrini holds a Master’s degree (cum laude) in Law from the University of Milan and a PhD in Agri-Food System (EU Food Law) from the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. She conducted a research visit at the University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) in 2019. She is a Lecturer and Researcher in the Law Group at Wageningen University (WUR), where she teaches Food Law and coordinates the Regulation and Legal Transformation of Food Systems course. She is an expert in the CAP, the Farm to Fork Strategy, and Short Food Supply Chains—with a deep interest in all the legal issues this topic involves—always tackling scientific research with an interdisciplinary approach.

About the book

This volume presents a thorough analysis of the concept and role of Short Food Supply Chains (SFSCs) within the EU legal framework with a two-fold aim: first, it shows the pitfalls of the current legal scenario, which often limits alternatives rather than promoting them, and second, it provides a new conceptualisation for SFSCs under EU law by delineating and integrating all their distinctive features.

Agricultural landscapes in the EU are now undergoing fundamental changes, revealing an increasing interest in SFSCs as a tool for promoting both local products and their food systems. Despite being the backbone of the EU agricultural systemSFSCs’ position in the current socioeconomic narrative has not been sufficiently fostered. In response, the book traces how SFSCs have historically been dealt with under the agricultural rules of the CAP, and to a much lesser extent, those relating to internal market food law, delving into the intricate relationship between agricultural and food law.

The integration of these two disciplines into an agri-food law domain represented a pivotal shift in legal discourse, particularly in the context of SFSC regulation. The legal analysis extends its scope to encompass spatial and historical dimensions, enriching the contextual understanding of regulatory frameworks over time and across geographical boundaries.

This new conceptualisation does not aim to establish a universal, set in stone legal definition for SFSCs applicable across disciplines. Rather, it seeks to identify common themes and key features among various SFSC initiatives. These themes serve as the foundation for determining a set of minimum legal requirements for the recognition and valorisation of SFSC initiatives at the EU level, which Member States can then tailor to their specific needs. The goal is to lay the groundwork for developing a concept that can be effectively operationalised across different sectors and geographical dimensions.

The book makes a substantial contribution to the current academic debate, filling a significant gap in the existing CAP literature. On the one hand, it provides the first comprehensive and systematic analysis of all the measures that have addressed small farmers and SFSCs, from the CAP reforms up to the present day. On the other, by adopting a new multidisciplinary perspective encompassing legal, sociological, and agri-food studies, it raises new questions on the role of short supply chains in light of the Farm to Fork Strategy and beyond.

Susanna Bonelli

Communication specialist

I skilfully craft communication messages for specific audiences and distribute them through appropriate channels. A perfectionist with a flair for teaching, I specialise in web copywriting, UX writing, content design, and content marketing.

This blog post is related to

Spoke 01

Global Sustainability

Fair food market for healthy citizens

Lead organisationUniPr

Spoke leaderFilippo Arfini
Research projectETHI_LEG

Definition of an ethical legal model of sustainable food system relationships


Managed by


Principal investigators

Irene Canfora

Referred to

Spoke 01

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