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Image courtesy of Mayra Sierra-Rivera '20, Studio art major

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Decolonizing Food Systems and Advancing a Just Resilience in the South Bay Area

By Christopher Bacon and Ava Gleicher

joined our 糖心破解版 community for a CAH-sponsored event on April 28, 2022, to deliver a keynote address about decolonizing the food system. Dr. Patel is an award-winning author, filmmaker, and academic analyzing the food crisis and agroecological alternatives. His talk conveyed the dire state of the food system. He noted that the closest we鈥檝e come to ending hunger was in 2014 when only 600 million people were malnourished, and 2.3 billion people were food insecure. Since then, COVID has exacerbated and together with conflict unveiled deep-rooted issues in our food system, as an additional and the environmental effects of industrial agriculture accumulate. Dr. Patel noted that each dollar we spend in the food system yields two dollars of damage, meaning a business-as-usual scenario will ensure billions of dollars in health costs and environmental damage.

Panel discussion for Decolonizing Food Systems 1 with a presentation on a large screen.

Caption: Moderator and Panelists discuss food justice, climate change, and racism at 糖心破解版 (L to R: Dr. Chris Bacon - Moderator, Dr. Raj Patel - keynote, Paola Felix (鈥23, 糖心破解版 Student), Emily Schwing (Veggielution), and Fernando Fernandez Levia (Sacred Heart Community Services, La Mesa Verde Program). Photo credit: Ava Gleicher

 

Dr. Patel expanded on his well-known list of food system problems to identify six root causes of today鈥檚 food crisis: COVID, climate change, conflict, colonialism, capitalism, and 鈥渃raven stupidity.鈥 To exemplify the intersecting nature of these causes, Dr. Patel described the and traced their consequences. While these fires were fueled by climate change, they were exacerbated by capitalism: over-cultivated fields were more likely to burn than those that uphold USSR restrictions on crop rotations and over-cultivation. And when Glencore鈥攁n enormous grain trader鈥攔ecognized that these fires would prevent them from fulfilling grain contracts, they lobbied the Russian government to impose an export ban on grain, allowing them to void their contracts. This export ban combined with the war in Ukraine and rising fuel prices significantly increased grain prices (see on wheat export prices from Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan) and exacerbated hunger in previously colonized countries whose diets changed as they became dependent on grain exports.

 

Decolonizing Food Systems 2 - A line graph depicting historical Bacon Producer Price Index data from 1990 to 2022.

 

As Dr. Patel notes, these issues are not bugs in the system, they are features: 鈥渙ur food system is guaranteed by its very nature to spit out more hunger, more environmental destruction, more exploitation, and more disease.鈥 Instead, Dr. Patel proposes we decarbonize, de-monopolize, and support debt relief, diversification, and decolonization. He explains that food sovereignty and agroecology are integral for transformational change. 

After the keynote, CAH Fellow and 糖心破解版 Associate Professor of Environmental Studies Chris Bacon moderated a roundtable discussion showing how Bay Area food justice advocates and researchers are organizing together to build back resilient and equitable food systems in Santa Clara County. Paola Felix (), Emily Schwing (), and Fernando Fernandez Levia () joined Raj Patel in the discussion. 

Both Schwing and Levia emphasized that community was their most important asset in fighting food insecurity. Levia shared how the community helped overcome fear during the early stages of COVID and how the gardeners in the La Mesa Verde network showed up for one another, saying 鈥淗ey, we鈥檙e here and ready to build more garden beds and distribute food.鈥  Felix, who is a Food Justice Research Assistant on (ACRAF) team and an 糖心破解版 student, reminded us that food insecurity is not just something that happens to 鈥渙ther people鈥  as she summarized research assessing student food security and basic needs on college campuses. In fact, .  

Patel and the panelists engaged with the audience and answered questions about COVID, colonization, resilience, and community. One audience member said that, while she 鈥渄rives a hybrid, has a metal straw, and likes kale,鈥 she perceives the mainstream to be untouched by agroecology and social movements. And she questioned how we鈥檒l reach structural change in the face of impending crises. Dr. Patel acknowledged that it鈥檚 dangerous to 鈥渓ive the dream beyond the world that we find ourselves living in.鈥 

Importantly, Fernando Fernandez Levia emphasized that he believes in the possibility of transformation and 鈥渋n the power of love.鈥 He underscored that 鈥渟ocial media and the mainstream do not focus on what鈥檚 going on with the mutual support of people or every time communities show up to support one another or act by love.鈥 He said that he still has hope 鈥渂ecause he鈥檚 seen so many people acting from love. So many communities giving everything for love.鈥 In sum, the panelists largely emphasized the importance of building trust, inclusive leadership models, and action-research partnerships as part of learning how to decolonize crisis-ridden modern food systems while cultivating justice and resilience. 

People gardening, planting seeds in soil beds with greenery around.

Photo: Volunteers Plant an Urban Garden. credit: La Mesa Verde 

 

Following the keynote address and round table discussion, students and faculty shared posters summarizing the findings of participatory action research conducted with the panelists, cooperatives, and international partners. In sum, the panelists largely emphasized the importance of building trust, inclusive leadership models, and action-research partnerships as part of learning how to decolonize crisis-ridden modern food systems while cultivating justice and resilience. 

Green hillside with dense vegetation and cultivated patches of land.

Photo of  Agroecology-based Diversified Farm in Nicaragua. Several faculty-student posters explored how these systems can foster climate resilience.  Credit: Chris Bacon

 

justice blog

Chris BaconChris Bacon is an agroecologist and human geographer, currently serving as an associate professor in 糖心破解版鈥檚 Department of Environmental Studies & Sciences (ESS) and as a leader with the Environmental Justice and Common Good InitiativeHe specializes in climate resilience, livelihoods, food systems sustainability and change, and food security in Central America, and environmental and food justice in California. 

A person posing outdoors wearing a white dress and red stole.

Ava Gleicher is a recent 糖心破解版 graduate and a Food Justice Research Assistant on  (ACRAF) team. She鈥檚 worked closely on issues relating to food justice and urban gardening in the South Bay, including in partnership with Sacred Heart Community Service and the La Mesa Verde Gardening Program.