Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arr.angliss.edu.au:8080/jspui/handle/20.500.12270/389
Title: Food Sovereignty: A new societal paradigm for the 21st century?
Authors: Rose, Nick
Keywords: Food sovereignty
Sustainable agriculture
Issue Date: 6-Jul-2018
Publisher: Agriculture Faculty, Jember University, Indonesia
Citation: Rose, N. (2017, August 1-3). Food Sovereignty: A new societal paradigm for the 21st century? Conference: Food Sovereignty and Sustainable Agriculture Forum, University of Jember, East Java.
Abstract: Agricultural systems and rural communities have of course been the objects and subjects of agrarian change for a long time, with the establishment and spread of capitalism as the dominant global political economic system from the 16th century onwards and the consequent dynamics of industrialisation and urbanisation, which have rapidly gathered pace in recent decades. The period from 1980 to the present time, commonly known as the neoliberal era, also saw the rapid globalisation of food and agricultural systems driven by the intersecting processes of debt crises, structural adjustment loan conditionalities, the turn to trade liberalisation, and the growing corporate control, to the extent of duopolies and oligopolies, of key sectors of the global food system. This is the context in which food so vereignty emerged in the mid-1990s, as the response articulated by small, peasant and family farmers in many countries around the world under the umbrella of La Via Campesina (the farmers’ way). Originally developed as a counter-poise to what was perceived as a corporate led agenda of food security via industrialised, globalised and corporate-controlled agriculture and food systems, food sovereignty has since generated a substantive literature and accumulated body of practice around the world. As a result of the successful political advocacy of peasant organisations and heir allies, food sovereignty has also been institutionalised in a number of countries at the constitutional, legislative and regulatory level.
Description: This item is free to download from the link provided.
URI: https://jurnal.unej.ac.id/index.php/prosiding/article/view/7940/5589
http://arr.angliss.edu.au:8080/jspui/handle/20.500.12270/389
ISBN: 978-602-61803-4-6
Appears in Collections:Agriculture

Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.