Organisational Viability in Artisan Dairy Short Food Supply Chains: A Cybernetic Diagnosis Using the Viable System Model
Journal
Systems
ISSN
2079-8954
Publisher
MDPI AG
Date Issued
2026
Author(s)
Vilalta-Perdomo, Eliseo
Michel-Villarreal, Rosario
Cho, Ah-Reum
Type
text::journal::journal article
Abstract
Short food supply chains (SFSCs) for artisan dairy products promote rural development, cultural preservation, and consumer trust but face challenges not found in mainstream chains. This study focuses on queso Tenate, a traditional cow-milk cheese from central Mexico, and examines how its SFSC organisational structure influences its capacity to ensure food safety, quality consistency, market delivery, and viability. Using a single-case exploratory design, the study applies the Viable System Model (VSM) as a diagnostic framework to map systemic functions within an artisan dairy enterprise. Data were collected through VSM-informed interviews and observations of production and retail practices. The findings show that food safety, quality performance, and market delivery reliability are structurally mediated by systemic coherence, not product characteristics alone. While strong relational coordination and shared identity sustain viability, several functions—particularly coordination, audit, and intelligence—remain person-dependent. This study identifies structural implications for strengthening regulatory coordination and monitoring practices without undermining relational management or artisan identity. The primary contributions are as follows: (i) extending SFSC research through a systemic diagnosis of an artisan dairy chain in an emerging economy; (ii) linking VSM-based organisational study to food safety, quality consistency, and market performance; and (iii) positioning VSM as a conversational tool for SFSC viability. Limitations include the single-case design, reliance on qualitative data, and absence of longitudinal measurements. Future research should compare VSM applications across multiple SFSCs, integrate quantitative analyses, and explore its use as a management tool. The study highlights the role of systemic coherence in ensuring SFSC sustainability and cultural embeddedness. © The authors © MDPI.
License
Acceso Abierto
How to cite
Salinas-Navarro, D. E., Vilalta-Perdomo, E., Michel-Villarreal, R., & Cho, A.-R. (2026). Organisational Viability in Artisan Dairy Short Food Supply Chains: A Cybernetic Diagnosis Using the Viable System Model. Systems, 14(4), 400. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14040400
