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Abstract

The Article examines the Italian rice sector as a case study in how law mediates the tensions between territorial agricultural traditions and the pressures of globalization. Focusing on the rice-producing districts of Piedmont and Lombardy, the Article argues that the resilience of Italian rice production cannot be explained solely by agronomic or economic factors. Rather, it depends on a dense legal and institutional framework that structures water governance, quality control, market organization, and contractual relations across the supply chain.

The Article develops three principal claims. First, it shows that the competitiveness of Italian rice production rests on an integrated model in which public irrigation consortia, the National Rice Authority, and statutory rules governing classification, labeling, and commercialization together produce market transparency and reduce informational asymmetries. Second, it argues that the revival of autochthonous varieties—most notably Riso Gigante di Vercelli—demonstrates the legal significance of hybrid governance tools, including Slow Food Presidia and production guidelines, in preserving biodiversity, promoting sustainability, and reinforcing territorial identity where formal PDO and PGI protections remain limited. Third, it contends that contractual standardization in paddy-rice sales, read alongside the European Union’s intervention against unfair trading practices, offers an important mechanism for correcting structural imbalances between producers and downstream actors.

By connecting market regulation, quality governance, and local ecological knowledge, the Article advances a broader claim: agricultural law should not be understood merely as a technical body of rules governing production and exchange, but as a constitutive framework through which sustainability, economic coordination, and productive identity are legally organized. The Italian rice sector thus offers a paradigmatic example of how law can transform territorial specificity into a durable competitive advantage in an increasingly globalized food economy.

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