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Transcript - Episode 65
Transcript
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Women Scientists from Global South on Food Security (Part 3)
Podcast episode
500 experts, 60 countries, 1 Global Food Security Conference
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Resumen del taller virtual “Enfoques de agricultura sostenible y su relación con la naturaleza”
Essay
El 11 de abril, desde MESA Colombia realizamos el taller virtual “Enfoques de agricultura sostenible y su relación con la naturaleza”, en donde conversamos sobre cómo la agroecología, la agricultura regenerativa y la agricultura orgánica definen la naturaleza o su relación con ella y sobre los elementos comunes entre estos enfoques como una oportunidad para la acción política a favor de los sistemas alimentarios sostenibles.
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How can feminist perspectives illuminate our vision(s) for meat?
Essay
In a piece originally published by the Feminist Food Journal, Tamsin Blaxter uses a feminist lens to examine how gender shapes the ways in which we interpret and project certain futures for meat.The Feminist Food Journal (FFJ) is an online publication that explores food and culture through an intersectional and global feminist lens.An audio version of this essay will be available from FFJ shortly. The FEED Podcast is also producing an episode in collaboration with FFJ, due out later this year.
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Presenting "Less And Better?: Ep 1: Its Complicated"
Podcast episode
It feels like one of the biggest questions of our time: what do we do about meat?
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Transcript - Episode 66
Transcript
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Animal welfare and ethics in food and agriculture
Explainer
The role of non-human animals in the food system is more fiercely contested now than ever before. Deep chasms exist between different actors’ visions of the future and their acceptance of the present. What some view as moral outrages, others see as valued traditions, wellsprings of pride and identity, honed crafts, sources of indispensable nutrients, and so much more; intersections with other issues (environmental harms, rural economies, development and poverty) add still further tension. It is a difficult knot to untangle. Reflecting and contributing to these radical differences in positions, stakeholders in these debates work within varied frameworks. For philosophers of animal ethics, these are fundamentally moral questions that must be answered by direct engagement with our value systems. For animal welfare scientists, we can move forward by deepening our empirically-based understanding of other animals’ lives. For farmers, fishers, and others practically engaged in producing animal foods, too little attention is paid to the moral authority gained from daily working alongside other animals and understanding intuitively what is and is not good practice.In this explainer, we explore the paradigms and arguments surrounding animal ethics and animal welfare. We investigate how and why different disciplines frame the debate differently, the range of positions, and whether any areas of agreement might signal pathways to progress. https://www.doi.org/10.56661/f2d8f4c7
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Is parity pricing enough?
Journal articles
Parity pricing, or setting a price floor comparatively equal to an historical period of fair compensation for agricultural commodities, has been debated by scholars as a solution to continually falling farm gate prices in the US. This paper explores the validity of this claim and offers a critique that parity pricing is no silver bullet. Low farm gate prices are rooted in complex and long standing injustices and if farmers are to achieve fair living wages, multi-pronged efforts across scales of governance will be required.
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Food without agriculture
Journal articles
This paper reviews non-agricultural food production methods, or ways of producing food that don’t rely on standard land, water and energy use. It provides detailed descriptions of these methods including “air protein” or protein derived using only CO2 and H2 from the air. It also explores the ethical and logistical considerations to advance these technologies to increase resilience to global catastrophes such as sun blocking volcanic winters.
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