Natalie Baszile on Why ‘Black Land Matters’
Backgrounders & Issue Brief | Elise Proulx | Jul 1, 2021
Download the PDF version here. The following interview was originally published at Oaklandside. It has been republished here with permission.…
Download the PDF version here. The following interview was originally published at Oaklandside. It has been republished here with permission.…
To download our PDF, click here. The people who labor in US fields produce immense wealth, yet poverty among farmworkers…
The San Joaquin Valley stands as one of the jewels of US agriculture: a massive producer of fruits, vegetables, wine grapes, and nuts. Like the state of California itself, it came into US possession during a gold rush—and has been shaped by money and power ever since.
The following Backgrounder is an excerpt from Food First’s “A Foodie’s Guide to Capitalism: The Political Economy of What We…
The following is a special edition, eight-page Backgrounder covering the experiences and insights from farmers and farmworkers during the COVID-19…
What does it look like when activist-scholars, embedded in academic institutions that foster a culture of individualism and competition, work to collectivize their efforts and support social movements fighting for systemic change?
How can agroecology be advanced, amplified, scaled up and out? In each context, there are enabling and disabling conditions that shape the potential for agroecology to be scaled. This Food First Issue Brief identifies six ‘domains of transformation’ that are essential to consider in agroecology transformations.
Thirty years ago many banana workers in the Philippines made a radical change in their work and lives. They transformed the militant unions they had organized to wrest a decent living from the multinational corporations that control much of the world’s food production. Instead of working for wages, they used the country’s land reform law to become the owners of the plantations where they had labored for generations.
To download this Backgrounder, click here. When we were children, a long auto trip would require a stop every hour…
It is within our reach to end hunger in the world. It has been within our reach for a while now. But the challenges we must surmount to achieve this have been fundamentally, essentially institutional.
This publication was edited by Luis Escala Rabadan. This publication is the final part of a three part Issue Brief…
Traducción por Rosalí Jurado y Alan Llanos Velázquez, Edición: Nancy Utley García y Luis Escala Rabadán. Esta publicación es la…