Article at
https://sustainabletompkins.org/signs-of-sustainability/tompkins-weekly-column/uniting-for-a-just-and-sustainable-food-system/



*Uniting for a Just and Sustainable Food System*



Tompkins Weekly         6-12-17



By Kate Cardona



As farmer and educator Damon Brangman reflected last fall on the many food
and agriculture conferences he has attended around the country, he realized
that Ithaca, with its abundant farmland, fresh food, and community members
interested in the connection between food and social justice would be an
ideal place to host a conference.



Through conversations between Brangman, staff members of *Groundswell
Center for Local Food & Farming* <http://groundswellcenter.org/> and
Cornell Professor Rachel Bezner-Kerr, a collaborative vision for the Farm
to Plate Conference was born.



This May, that vision came to life as more than 300 people gathered in
Ithaca for three days to “Educate, Celebrate and Create a Just and
Sustainable Food System.” One of the underlying questions throughout the
conference was: What makes a food system both sustainable AND just?



The many powerful keynote speakers and panel presenters had lots of
valuable experience and insight to help answer this question. The
conference kicked off at Cornell’s Africana Center with a speaker panel of
four Black farmers and food activists of: Rafael Aponte, Jamila Simon,
Karen Washington and Malik Yakini.



The panelists each spoke about the work they do for food sovereignty, or
“the right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced
through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to
define their own food and agriculture systems.”



Each panelist works within an organizations that support Black community
members to grow their own food on their own terms. They grounded the
discussion of their efforts in the history of racism in the U.S. food
system, including the genocide of the indigenous peoples of this continent,
the reality of slavery and exploitation as the economic backbone of this
country, the food desert neighborhoods decimated through racist zoning and
housing policies, and the ongoing exploitation of immigrant farm and food
workers. Yet, as each panelist made clear, as long as these unjust policies
have existed, so too has resistance. People of color have long been at the
forefront of movement for food justice, land access and healthy, fresh food
for all. This work continues around the country today.



The second day began at The Space at GreenStar, with a panel of farmers and
academic agroecologists thinking through the meaning and importance of
agroecology on both a local and a global scale. Agroecology is “an approach
that seeks to integrate ecological science with other disciplines (such as
agronomy, sociology, history, etc.) and knowledge systems (such as local,
indigenous, etc.) to guide research and actions towards the sustainable
transformation of our current agrifood system.”



Through lessons learned from local farmers Thor Oechsner and Erica Frenay,
to insights gained from the international research of professors Hannah
Wittman, V. Ernesto Mendez and writer and activist Raj Patel, the
importance of taking a holistic, transdisciplinary approach to agriculture
– looking not only at its ecological implications but also its social,
political, and economic impacts – rose to the forefront.



Patel continued digging into these topics in his keynote talk – titled
“Reparation Ecology” – later that day, asking the audience to consider how
European colonialism and capitalism combined to create our current food
system. While the local food movement provides part of an answer to the
imbalances and injustices these systems have created, it does not fully
address the underlying issues of patriarchy, racism, or climate change. To
truly transform our food system, Patel advocates for first, a recognition
of this history, leading to reparation, redistribution, reimagination and
finally, recreation.



Conference participants applied many of these themes during the second
day’s afternoon session, through facilitated roundtable discussions on the
topics of food movements, urban gardening, school food, food policy and
more.



The roundtables enabled people to connect to existing efforts and resources
as well as brainstorm new ideas for strengthening our Finger Lakes food
system. The afternoon also offered tours of many regional farms including
Kingbird Farm, Wellspring Forest Farm, Interbrook Farm, Farmer Ground Flour
and Groundswell Center’s Incubator Farm, and gave participants insight into
some of the innovative practices employed by the sustainable farmers of the
Finger Lakes.



The second day concluded at Beverly J. Martin Elementary School, with a
fundraiser dinner for Brangman’s project – Roots Rising Farm – plus an
awards ceremony honoring several key individuals who have contributed to
the vibrant Finger Lakes food and farm community. The evening was
well-capped with a powerful keynote from Malik Yakini of the *Detroit Black
Food Security Coalition* <https://detroitblackfoodsecurity.org/>.



On the final day, community members, educators, farmers and food justice
activists offered workshops and skillshares on topics ranging from food
policy to growing mushrooms to cooking on a budget, and more than a dozen
more. It is more clear than ever that this community has so much knowledge
to offer each other toward creating a just and sustainable food system.



The conference closed with an action planning session where participants
discussed how to ensure that those who are most directly impacted by
inequities in the food system are centered in decision making. Exciting
ideas emerged related to school food policy, urban gardening, food waste
and others. The Farm to Plate Conference created a space for people from
different sectors of the food system to learn together and continue to
address the most pressing food issues of our time and place, with a
holistic, justice-based approach. Stay tuned for next steps!



Videos of the keynote talks will be posted soon; get notified by *joining
the Groundswell Center newsletter *
<http://groundswellcenter.org/email-list>and *liking us on Facebook*
<http://facebook.com/groundswellcenter>.



*Kate Cardona is the equity, outreach and course coordinator for
Groundswell Center for Local Food & Farming, a project of the Center for
Transformative Action.*



Sasha Paris
Office Assistant
Sustainable Tompkins
309 N. Aurora Street
Ithaca, NY 14850
www.sustainabletompkins.org
Office phone: 607-272-1720
sa...@sustainabletompkins.org

For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/
If you have questions about this list please contact the list manager, Tom 
Shelley, at t...@cornell.edu.

Reply via email to