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. 2021 May 25;103(1):77–89. doi: 10.1007/s41130-021-00148-w

Table 1.

The performance of local food systems on key sustainability criteria

GHG emissions Other environm. Food security Other social Economic
Costello et al., 2021 no
Takacs & Borrion, 2020 uncertain
Majewski et al., 2020 no uncertain some yes
Bellmann, 2020 no
Ritchie, 2020 no
Kinnunen et al., 2020 no
Bell & Horvath, 2020 no
Malak-Rawlikowska et al., 2019 no uncertain yes
Kiss et al., 2019 uncertain uncertain some uncertain
Vittersø et al., 2019 uncertain uncertain some uncertain
Mancini et al., 2019 uncertain yes yes
Rogissart et al., 2019 uncertain uncertain uncertain uncertain
Sandström et al., 2018 uncertain
Deppermann et al., 2018 uncertain no uncertain uncertain
Fraser & Balcombe, 2018 uncertain uncertain uncertain uncertain uncertain
Schmitt et al., 2017 no some no some yes
Clapp, 2017 no
Notarnicola et al., 2017 uncertain
Tasca et al., 2017 uncertain yes
Karg et al., 2016 some some
de Fazio, 2016 some yes
Schwarz et al., 2016 yes yes no some uncertain
Pradhan et al., 2015 no no uncertain
Puma et al., 2015 some
Migliore et al., 2015 uncertain
Low et al., 2015 uncertain
Pradhan et al., 2014 no no no
D’Odorico et al., 2014 no
Kneafsey et al., 2013 uncertain uncertain some yes
Galli & Brunori, 2015 uncertain uncertain yes some
Webb et al., 2013 uncertain uncertain no
Aubry & Kebir, 2013 uncertain
Campbell, 2012 uncertain
Mundler & Rumpus, 2012 uncertain
Sexton, 2009 uncertain
Coley et al., 2009 uncertain
Rask & Rask, 2011 uncertain no
DeSoucey, 2012 uncertain uncertain
Carlsson-Kanyama & González, 2009 uncertain
Edwards-Jones, 2010 uncertain uncertain uncertain
Peters et al., 2009 uncertain uncertain uncertain uncertain

Note: Following our qualitative assessment of the papers, the cells in the table answer the question whether local food systems and short supply chains contribute to more sustainability in the corresponding category (yes), do not contribute to more sustainability (no), may do so for some products or regions but not for others (uncertain), or may do so only for some sub-categories (some). Studies that are limited in scope (e.g. to organic lettuce in Lombardy or oranges in the USA) may produce more specific results than reviews that cover a broad range of products and regions. For this review, we did a systematic search on “Scholar”, an academic search engine that provides an effective way to access peer-reviewed papers and grey literature (Dixon et al., 2010; Shultz, 2007). We started from an existing set of literature and defined the following two search strings to do a systematic search for literature published since 2006 (food OR agricultural OR “agri-food” “short supply” OR “short value” OR “local supply” OR “local value” chain OR chains OR system OR systems sustainable OR sustainability OR footprint OR carbon OR emissions) and (food OR agricultural “self-sufficiency” OR “self-sufficient” OR autarky OR autarkic OR foodshed OR foodsheds). We sorted the results by relevance and then retrieved the papers based on their substance, following an evaluation of their titles and abstracts. We continued with the evaluation until the bulk of search results were no longer relevant. We also excluded books as well as articles in predatory journals (Eriksson & Helgesson, 2017; Koerber et al., 2020), but we included grey literature from academic institutions and think-tanks. We complemented the results through ad hoc searches and snowballing (Badampudi et al., 2015). While this is not an exhaustive review of the literature, it gives a representative overview of the findings in the most relevant literature on local food systems and short supply chains, ranging from individual case studies and modelling exercises to reviews