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Food and Farmworker Justice

Agroecological approaches, soil and toil

 

  • Darrin Qualman introduces presentation with a slide saying, Food Farms, Climate, and the Future

    The National Farmers Union of Canada hosts a convention with guest speaker Darrin Qualman, Director of Climate Crisis Policy and Action, on policies that can make a difference in the area of climate change and agriculture. [50:38]

| Union of Concerned Scientists

鈥淎s our climate continues to heat up and the impacts of that warming grow more frequent and severe, farmers and farm communities around the world will be increasingly challenged. And US farmers won鈥檛 be spared the damage that climate change is already beginning to inflict.鈥 Published March 20, 2019

 

 | NRDC

鈥淎 new report warns that the health and safety of workers across the country, both indoors and outdoors, is increasingly at risk from excessive heat, increasing air and water pollution, spreading infectious diseases, extreme weather, challenges to their mental health and other impacts from climate change.鈥 Published July 28, 2020

 

 | Union of Concerned Scientists

The Union of Concerned Scientists published a report showing that climate change poses dire threats to farmworkers. 鈥淔armworkers鈥 health, safety, and dignity need to be among our top priorities as we deal with the impacts of climate change on agriculture.鈥 This article outlines six reasons why. Author: , published December 9, 2019

 

 | Statesman Journal

This article offers one example from Oregon of farmworkers鈥 vulnerability to extreme weather. Author: , published June 29, 2021

 

  • A group of young adults sits in a circle discussion in a workshop

    This video introduces the climate related issues impacting farmworkers and explores one organization鈥檚 efforts to provide Florida farmworkers 鈥渨ith opportunities to apply and experiment with agroecological techniques to grow healthy, organic produce for their families and for local markets.鈥 [12:37]

     

 | Organic Without Boundaries

鈥淎groecology is the 鈥榚cology of the food system鈥 and a farming approach that is inspired by natural ecosystems. It combines local and scientific knowledge and applies ecological and social approaches to agricultural systems, focusing on the interactions between plants, animals, humans, and the environment.鈥 Published August 8, 2018

 

 | La Via Campesina

This brief provides an overview of The Farmer to Farmer Agroecology Movement (MACAC) in Cuba, a grassroots movement that has empowered peasant farmers to adopt more sustainable, efficient, healthy agricultural practices and has opened the way for food sovereignty throughout the country.

 

  • The acronym FFAC written in a green circle next to the silhouettes of a cow and a calf

    Factory Farming Awareness Coalition (FFAC)鈥檚 mission is to 鈥渆mpower people to end factory farming,鈥 envisioning a just and sustainable food system for all. This organization was represented in tUrn6 (spring 2022).

     

 | Farm Sanctuary

鈥淲ith more than nine billion animals raised and slaughtered for human consumption each year in the U.S. alone, modern animal agriculture puts an incredible strain on natural resources such as land, water, and fossil fuel.鈥 Farm Sanctuary offers facts on the industry鈥檚 contributions to climate change, as well as curriculum modules and solutions for addressing this problem.

 

  • An illustration of a row of sprouts taking in carbon molecules from the air and storing the molecules in the soil

    鈥淣arrated by Larry Kopald of Carbon Underground, The Soil Story reveals how soil can reverse climate change. 鈥The answer is literally right under our feet.鈥欌 [03:29]

  • A natural green field with rows of crops and a dirt path with two people walking along it

    鈥淩egenerative practices and knowledge come from Indigenous and Black farmers, and support healthy soil, animals and people鈥 Through rematriation (or remothering the land), this centuries-old sustainable agricultural system has the power to connect Indigenous and Black people with their land in a way that is restorative, healing and rejuvenating for both people and the planet.鈥 [10:39]

  • An illustration of a palm tree plantation with a man standing in the middle harvesting fruit

    鈥溾赌The massive expansion of palm oil plantations has destroyed critical rainforests in Indonesia, home to millions of Indigenous peoples and some of the world鈥檚 richest biological diversity.鈥 Sacrificing the lives, health, and safety of the people who work on palm oil plantations is far too high a price to pay for the cheap palm oil used in snack foods made by companies like PepsiCo.鈥 [03:17]

 | The Washington Post

鈥淢ars, Nestl茅 and Hershey pledged nearly two decades ago to stop using cocoa harvested by children. Yet much of the chocolate you buy still starts with child labor.鈥 Authors:  and , published June 5, 2019

 

  • The words FOOD EMPOWERMENT PROJECT written against a  green background with an ear of wheat shaped like a key at the tip

    This list provides a helpful reference on which brands do not source chocolate from areas where child labor and/or slavery are prevalent. The Food Empowerment Project encourages healthy and compassionate food choices 鈥渂y spotlighting the abuse of animals on farms, the depletion of natural resources, unfair working conditions for produce workers, and the unavailability of healthy foods in low-income areas.鈥

     

  • The words, THE EDIBLE SCHOOLYARD PROJECT, written in yellow-green on a bright salmon-colored banner

    Edible Education 101 is a free public lecture series launched by the Edible Schoolyard Project in partnership with UC Berkeley. It invites 鈥渇ood systems leaders to present on their insights, research, and experiences.鈥 

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