Boeren en buren door Ron Methorst – TED CAH Vilentum

Afgelopen dinsdag 4 februari heeft Ron Methorst zijn TED talk Boeren en Buren gehouden op CAH Vilentum waarin hij schets hoe de landbouw zich heeft ontwikkeld  in een veranderende (stedelijke) omgeving en de boeren van deze tijd ook  weer voor de uitdaging staan om de relatie met hun natuurlijke en sociale omgeving opnieuw vorm en inhoud te geven. Ron onderzoekt dit voor Kampereiland en wil hierop promoveren. Zijn verhaal is terug hieronder te kijken. Meer weten? Vraag het Ron zelf: r.methorst@cahvilentum.nl

Feminization of Agricultural Production in Rural China – PhD-thesis Xiangdan Meng

January 2014 Xiangdan Meng has successfully defended her PhD-thesis “Feminization of Agricultural Production in Rural China:
A Sociological Analysis“. It can still be viewed at wurtv.wur.nl.

Rural-urban migration of male labour force is an unstoppable process in China. Although some women also migrate to work in cities, most of these women return to the villages after marriage. They need to take care of the children and the family and to work on their smallholder farms. In general, women’s labour participation in agriculture has increased due to the migration of the male labourers and they have become the main labour force in smallholder agriculture. This thesis is a sociological analysis on the impact of this change on the situation of these women and on smallholder agriculture from the women’s perspective. Continue reading

Food Sovereignty: A critical dialogue – live streaming of conference

Food sovereignty conferenceFollowing the Yale conference (see the post), the ISS-Agrarian, Food & Environmental Studies (AFES), Initiatives in Critical Agrarian Studies (ICAS), Transnational Institute (TNI), Institute for Food and Development Policy/Food First, Land Deal Politics Initiatives (LDPI) and The Journal of Peasant Studies organised a Food sovereignty Conference in The Hague, Friday 24.

Download the programme. There will be live streaming of the conference.

In the shadow of policy – edited by Paul Hebinck and Ben Cousins

In the shadow of policyedited by Paul Hebinck (Sociology of Rural Development, Wageningen University) and Ben Cousins (University of the Western Cape, Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies). Published by WITS University Press, see: http://witspress.co.za/catalogue/in-the-shadow-of-policy.

Notions of land and agrarian reform are now well entrenched in the everyday life of a significant number of people in post-apartheid South Africa. What reform actually means for everyday life varies considerably, however. The same counts for how we study and understand land and agrarian reform processes. The purpose of the book is not to provide an extensive review of academic debates or to argue that land reform has ‘failed’ to achieve its set goals so much as to document the different ways in which land and agrarian reform policies are experienced and practised at the grassroots level and the kind of responses they generate at the level of the state, policymakers and civil society (interest and lobby groups, non-governmental organisations, etc.). The book sets out to contribute to existing critical reflections by engaging with the policy debate along with the academic one in South Africa and elsewhere. These debates  surround a number of themes and pertinent issues, in turn informing and shaping the collection of papers brought together in this book. The title of the book, ‘In the Shadow of Policy: Everyday Practice in South Africa’s Land and Agrarian Reform’, is telling for the nature and character of the argument. The book aims to elucidate how a range of social actors involved in the land and agrarian reform process (e.g. policy makers, state officials, beneficiaries, extension workers), engage with the ideas and actions of policy institutions. In this way the book documents how these ideas are transmitted, contested, reassembled, and negotiated at the points where policy decisions and implementations impinge upon the life circumstances and everyday lifeworlds of so-called ‘lay’ or ‘non-expert’ actors.

Food Otherwise Conference – February 21, 22 2014, Wageningen

Food Otherwise Conference: Towards fair and sustainable food and agriculture systems
February 21, 22 2014 Wageningen.

More and more farmers, consumers, scientists and civil society organisations are working towards sustainable and fair ways of producing food. They are forging new relationships between farmers and consumers. They offer creative, dynamic and diverse alternatives to large-scale, anonymous and industrialised food production and the increasing influence of transnational corporations. Do you want to learn, experience, think along and discuss new and feasible food and agriculture systems with others? Would you like to build bridges and help to achieve a more sustainable and fair food and agriculture system? Do you want to get to know sustainable (young) farmers? Become inspired by innovative examples from the Netherlands, Flanders and abroad? Then come to our two day conference in Wageningen on 21 and 22 February 2014!

Keynote speakers Olivier de Schutter, UN rapporteur on the right to food • Pablo Tittonell, professor Farming Systems Ecology Wageningen University • Hanny van Geel, farmer and board member of La Via Campesina Europe • Vandana Shiva, Indian scientist and activist (tbc).

For whom? Farmers, consumers, scientists, beekeepers, students, artists, professionals in the food and agro sectors, policymakers, politicians and journalists. Translation English-Dutch provided in the plenary sessions. Some workshops will be in English. Workshops and discussions around several themes, such as: • Local food networks: from producer to consumer • The power of large agricultural corporations • Agro-ecology • Fair incomes for farmers • Urban agriculture • Permaculture / food forests • Fair trade and Agricultural policies • Land rights • Seeds and biodiversity • Soil and closed-loop agriculture