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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Agron.

Sec. Agroecological Cropping Systems

This article is part of the Research TopicAgroecology in Action: Case Studies, Challenges and Best PracticesView all 18 articles

HOLPA-Based Multidimensional Assessment for Context-Specific Agroecological Transitions in Semi-Arid Tunisia

Provisionally accepted
Wael  ToukabriWael Toukabri1*Véronique  AlaryVéronique Alary2,3Zahra  ShiriZahra Shiri2Meriem  BarbouchiMeriem Barbouchi1Haithem  BahriHaithem Bahri1Layal  AtassiLayal Atassi4Abeyou  WorqlulAbeyou Worqlul2Zied  IdoudiZied Idoudi2Quang Bao  LeQuang Bao Le2Udo  RudigerUdo Rudiger2Hatem  Cheikh M'HamedHatem Cheikh M'Hamed1Mohamed  AnnabiMohamed Annabi1Aymen  FrijaAymen Frija2
  • 1National Institute of Agronomic Research of Tunisia, Ariana, Tunisia
  • 2International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas North Africa Regional, Tunis, Tunisia
  • 3L'Institut Agro Montpellier, Montpellier, France
  • 4International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas Egypt, Cairo, Egypt

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Agroecological transitions offer a viable pathway for transforming agri-food systems toward sustainability, yet fostering durable adoption and meaningful impact requires a deep understanding of local socio-ecological contexts to design targeted, context-sensitive interventions. This study aims to characterize the socio-ecological context, adherence to agroecological principles, and multi-domain performance to identify leverage points for strengthening system resilience. We applied the Holistic Localized Performance Assessment (HOLPA) framework in six rural communities (167 farm households) in the semi-arid Kef–Siliana transect (Tunisia), combining household surveys, soil sampling, contextual diagnostics, scoring of adherences to agroecological principles, and performance indicators (agronomic, environmental, social, and economic). Results reveal pronounced heterogeneity across the studied communities, with distinct degrees of agroecological integration reflecting divergent biophysical conditions, resource endowments, and institutional contexts. Overall, Tunisian rural communities appear to be engaged in an incipient yet uneven agroecological transition. A consistent duality characterizes this process: Social values, including fairness and equity, and some recycling practices are relatively well established, whereas ecological functionality (soil health, ecological synergies), knowledge co-creation, and climate-mitigation practices remain weak. This heterogeneity underscores that agroecological transitions are highly context-specific processes shaped by local assets and governance environments, rather than uniform or linear pathways. Performance patterns highlight the interplay between diversification and resilience: more diversified systems exhibited lower crop losses, while simplified systems (monoculture-dominated systems) suffered greater agronomic and environmental vulnerability. Our application reveals that HOLPA's current household-level and static design constrains the analysis of temporal dynamics and landscape-scale interactions; capturing the full complexity of transitions will require future iterations to integrate longitudinal and spatial monitoring. Nonetheless, this study demonstrates that HOLPA proves effective in integrating farm household-level diagnostics with system-level performance, offering structured guidance for developing localized roadmaps that highlight context-specific entry points and potential pathways to co-design resilient, equitable, and context-sensitive agri-food systems

Keywords: agroecology, Local indicators, Performance assessment, Smallholder farming, Sustainable agri-food systems

Received: 07 Oct 2025; Accepted: 16 Feb 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Toukabri, Alary, Shiri, Barbouchi, Bahri, Atassi, Worqlul, Idoudi, Le, Rudiger, Cheikh M'Hamed, Annabi and Frija. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Wael Toukabri

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