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Transforming food systems through agroecology: enhancing farmers' autonomy for a safe and just transition
Food, nutrition and fresh water
Published November 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
06-11-2024 to 06-11-2025
Available on-demand until 6th November 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Food systems contribute to multiple crises while failing to deliver healthy, nutritious food for all. A substantial amount of research suggests that the root cause of this issue lies in the complete integration of food systems within global capitalism and the consequent subordination of fairness and sustainability to profit accumulation. We draw on critical political economy to explore how the integration of food systems within global capitalism and their subordination to profit occur. Subsequently, we illustrate how this subordination erodes the autonomy of food producers, with strong environmental and social consequences for consumers and society at large. Lastly, we discuss how agroecology could transform food systems and enhance producers' autonomy, while mitigating environmental and social dysfunction. We stress how the transformative power of agroecology lies in its double nature: concrete (technical) and social (political). By acting in both dimensions, agroecology can help reorient food systems away from profit accumulation and towards better meeting community needs, in line with the tenets of food sovereignty.
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Email address
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0207 424 4950

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