Cultivating Food Justice 4: Consumption, care and culinary justice
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 2/28/2022
Start Time: 2:00 PM
End Time: 3:20 PM
Theme: Climate Justice
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Organizer(s):
Alison Alkon
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Chairs(s):
Julian Agyeman, Tufts University
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Description:
We are excited to begin working on a second edition of our co-edited book Cultivating Food Justice. Rather than merely update the introduction, we are looking to create a new volume that can capture the myriad ways that food justice activism and scholarship is flourishing.
Early academic texts, ours included, described food justice as working to increase access to healthy and sustainably produced food in low-income communities and communities of color, and to addressing issues of discrimination against farmers of color. This session will investigate the ways that critical food justice research and activism have shifted and expanded, creating a new and more capacious field that is attuned to a variety of intersecting inequalities and the social and spatial processes that create them. Papers might address (and, we hope, can move beyond) the following themes and questions:
How have/can Black food geographies, Latinx food geographies and Indigenous/decolonial approaches shape food justice research and activism?
How can food justice better engage with feminist and queer theories, practices and ecologies?
How can we better understand and work from the intersections of food justice with workers rights, the Movement for Black Lives, prison abolition and other social movements?
How has/can the food justice movement engage in policy work beyond local food policy councils?
What role has/can food justice play in progressive national platforms such as the Green New Deal and the Movement for Black Lives?
How has/can the food justice movement engage with multiple forms of food activism and food production in Black, indigenous and immigrant communities?
How has/can food justice affected the emergency food system and how can critiques of and efforts to transform emergency food contribute to a broader notion of food justice?
What is the relationship between food justice and culinary justice? What role do/can chefs and restauranteurs play in the food justice movement?
How can recent research documenting the food practices of low-income people inform an expanded notion of food justice?
Presentation(s), if applicable
Annelise Straw, University of Kentucky; The Social Justice Dimensions of Chefs and Farm-to-X Initiatives |
Pascale Joassart-Marcelli, San Diego State University; Building Trendy Urban Foodscapes: Labor, (In)Visibility, and Precarity |
Esteve Giraud, ; Weaving in two food research journeys into a duo-ethnography |
Gundula Proksch, ; What can a pandemic (COVID-19) teach us about the resiliency of local food systems and their role in providing food justice? |
Barbora Adlerova, ; Towards care-full food justice: the role of experiential knowledge of food insecurity in food governance |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
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Cultivating Food Justice 4: Consumption, care and culinary justice
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Julian Agyeman - julian.agyeman@tufts.edu