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Transcript - what is ecomodernism
Transcript
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Jennifer Clapp on Commodifying Food (rebroadcast)
Podcast episode
Has the increasing commodification of food and financialization of the food system left us more vulnerable to food crises?
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Recording: Decoupling desire? Food, advertising, consumption and the question of limits
Event recording
On 6 May 2022, TABLE held a panel discussion, which brought together representatives from the advertising and food industries, from social enterprise and academia to explore advertising, food, desire and the question of ecological limits.  
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Recording: TABLE and SLU Food & Cities present Ask the Author: Rethinking urban living labs
Event recording
On 26 April 2022, TABLE and Food & Cities network at SLU jointly organised an Ask the Author session to discuss A tale of two labs: Rethinking urban living labs for advancing citizen engagement in food system transformation with co-authors Anke Brons and Koen van der Gaast.
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Recording: Fleshing out a future COP
Event recording
This joint event with TABLE and the Oxford Martin School on 24 February 2022 took the format of a panel discussion with: Dr Tara Garnett (director of TABLE and fellow of the Oxford Martin School); Dr Helena Wright, Policy Director at the FAIRR Initiative; Dr Pablo Manzano, Ikerbasque Research Fellow at the Basque Centre for Climate Change; and Dan Blaustein-Rejto, Director of Food and Agriculture at the Breakthrough Institute.
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A review of global meat consumption and sustainability
Journal articles
This paper offers a global review of the environmental, economic, social, health and ethical impacts of meat consumption, including trends in consumption over the past few decades. It also explores how the sector can become more sustainable by changing both production and consumption practices.
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Replacing some beef with mycoprotein reduces deforestation
Journal articles
Replacing 20% of ruminant meat consumption with microbial protein - specifically mycoprotein from fungal mycelium - could offset increases in global pasture area, reduce methane emissions, and halve annual CO2 emissions from deforestation, according to this life cycle assessment (LCA). However, reductions in emissions from deforestation may plateau as the proportion of meat replaced by microbial protein grows. The paper discusses the methodological limitations of static (as opposed to dynamic) LCA.
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Age-related differences in the moral view of animals
Journal articles
This paper explores how people’s moral views towards different animals change between childhood and adulthood. Based on surveys with participants in the UK, children were found to be less likely than adults to show speciesism (defined as assigning moral worth to beings based on their species), less likely to categorise farm animals as food as opposed to as pets, more likely to think farm animals should be treated better (than adults would treat them), and less likely to think it is morally acceptable to eat meat or animal products. The authors hypothesise that people learn to reconcile inner moral conflicts about eating animal products by forming a hierarchy in which some animals are given a lower moral standing.
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Rock weathering on cropland can sequester carbon
Journal articles
Enhanced rock weathering (ERW) on UK cropland, i.e. adding crushed rocks to soils (read more about the process here), could sequester 6–30 MtCO2 yr−1 by 2050, providing up to 45% of the atmospheric carbon removal necessary to reach national net zero goals. ERW can also reduce nitrous oxide emissions from soils, reduce soil acidification (through formation of carbonate) and reduce fertiliser requirements (by increasing supply of phosphorus and potassium). The paper questions the need for energy-intensive milling of rocks into fine particles, finding that particles on sites with high weathering potential are weathered rapidly regardless of size.
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