Ede in kaart – uitwerking visie rond thema ‘Sociaal en Gezond’ door studenten WU

Een groep studenten heeft in kader van ‘Academic Consultancy Training’ een opdracht uitgewerkt voor de gemeente Ede. Afgelopen vrijdagochtend is dat aan de gemeente gepresenteerd en in de middag ook aan onze leerstoelgroep op zorgboerderij Makandra in Ede. Hieronder de Samenvatting. Voor meer informatie: hanne.bookelmann@wur.nl.

Ede strategie

Samenvatting De gemeente Ede heeft in 2014 de visie ‘Ede, de Proeftuin voor Food’ opgesteld. Voor het uitdragen van deze visie is een samenwerkingsverband aangegaan dat bestaat uit de gemeente Ede, het NISB, de academische werkplaats AGORA en de Alliantie Voeding Gelderse Vallei. Het opstartende karakter van het samenwerkingsverband vraagt om een eerste stap in het concretiseren van de voedselvisie. Naar aanleiding daarvan is een projectteam vanuit de Wageningen University ingeschakeld. Het doel van het eindresultaat is een aanzet te geven voor de invulling van de strategische agenda voor het realiseren van de visie ‘Ede, de Proeftuin voor Food’ op het thema ‘Sociaal en Gezond’.

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Farm Experience Internship 2014 – video clip

As announced before the Farm Experience Internship (FEI) will be organized for the second time this summer. A clip has been of previous year’s FEI. ILEIA is one of the supporting partners and offers more information the FEI at their website.

 

 

Regulation of Participatory Guarantee Systems in Brazil: Achievements and Challenges

Maria Alicia MendoncaBy  Maria Alice F. C. Mendonça, Ph.D. student in Rural Development at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul/Brazil and Wageningen University/The Netherlands

Below my contribution to the IFOAM Global newsletter on Participatory Guarantee Systems published bimonthly. See the IFOAM PGS webpage for more information. Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS) are locally focused quality assurance systems that certify producers based on active participation of stakeholders and are built on a foundation of trust, social networks and knowledge exchange.

The Brazilian regulation for organic and agroecological production was introduced in the 1990’s in response to international restrictions on Brazilian organic products. Nevertheless, the agroecological movement stayed prominent and actively participated in discussions and negotiations with the government. As a result of this interaction between government and the agroecological movement, a series of laws, decrees and federal regulatory instructions for organic and agroecological production was enacted, e.g. the Organic Law and its respective regulatory instructions. Moreover, the National Policy on Organic Production and Agroecology (Política Nacional de Agroecologia e Produção Orgânica) and the National Action Plan for Organic Production and Agroecology (Plano Nacional de Agroecologia e Produção Orgânica) were released in 2012 and 2013 respectively. They settle the strategies for government investments in the expansion of agroecological production.

Currently, Brazilian farmers have three options to ensure the organic and agroecological quality of their produce: 1) Third-party certification; 2) Participatory Assessment Bodies; and 3) Social Control Organizations. These last two are systems operate at a local level and rely on the active participation of stakeholders. However, only the Participatory Assessment Bodies are considered as Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS) in the legal sense and authorized for the use of the national organic label, which is required for non-direct sales of organic products. In contrast, the Social Control system does not grant the right to use the national label and allows only the direct sale from small-scale family famers to the final consumers.

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From corporate control to food democracy – Food Otherwise video

Watch the video recorded during the 2014 Food Otherwise conference in Wageningen University, Netherlands. Interviews with activist Vandana Shiva, prof. Jan Douwe van der Ploeg and coordinator Europe for Via Campesina Hanny van Geel. See voedselanders.nl for more information on the conference.

Food and the City: free online short course

Registrations are now open for the Universities West Midland online short
course: Food and the City.

The course will run for 6 weeks from 2nd June 2014 and is completely free.
The course consists of 12 lessons, with 2 released each week.

It is designed to take around 20 hours to complete and will comprise of a
mixture of written materials & videos along with other media and links to optional background reading.

There will be a light level of assessment throughout and opportunities to interact with the course tutors and other participants. The course has designed the materials to be suitable for participants from a range of backgrounds who are interested in urban food issues.The course has been developed by academic experts from West Midland universities though the Food-Smart City project.

For more information and to sign up please visit http://www.foodcitycourse.com