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Agroecology and Food Sovereignty

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posted on 2024-09-05, 21:55 authored by Steve Gliessman, Harriet Friedmann, Philip H. Howard
We propose that agroecology provides a framework for understanding ‘levels’ for the transition to sustainable food systems. If we agree that agroecology includes social and political dimensions of governing territorial food systems, then it must be linked to movements for food sovereignty. However, the concentration of power in food and farming systems locks in industrial logic, posing immense barriers to agroecological and social transition. This creates a tension between efforts at convergence of food system innovations from below, versus co-optation of grass-roots language and practices by private and public actors who are committed not to changing the logic of industrial agriculture, but instead to reducing its harm. We suggest agroecological and food sovereignty movements consciously embrace this tension as a dance of creativity and appropriation. If this dance can be made generative rather than deadly, it can open pathways for transition to new ways of seeing, experiencing, and getting food.

Funding

International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems (iPES Food)

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Gliessman, S., Friedmann, H. and Howard, P. H. in 'Agroecology and Food Sovereignty' in Harris, J., Anderson, M., Clément, C. and Nisbett, N. (Eds) The Political Economy of Food, IDS Bulletin 50.2, Brighton: IDS

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IDS Bulletin 50.2

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

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Article

Copyright holder

Institute of Development Studies

Language

en

IDS team

Health and Nutrition

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Default project::9ce4e4dc-26e9-4d78-96e9-15e4dcac0642::600

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    Volume 50. Issue 2: The Political Economy of Food

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