Agrifood Transitions in the Anthropocene
Challenges, Contested Knowledge, and the Need for Change
First Edition
Edited by:
- Allison M. Loconto - French National Institute for Research on Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE)
- Douglas H. Constance - Sam Houston State University, USA
March 2024 | 416 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
The greatest challenges of the twenty-first century stem from the fact that we are now living in a new epoch: the Anthropocene. The human footprint on the planet can no longer be denied. One of the greatest and most essential human innovations, agriculture, is being increasingly recognised as a leading contributor to climate change. According to global governance bodies, the world will need to feed a predicted nine billion people by 2050. However, in this Anthropocene, we must address the environmental inequalities in how these people will be fed. This book explores our current societal struggles to transition towards more sustainable agrifood systems. It suggests that debates around sustainable agriculture must be social as well as technical, exploring the growth of social movements campaigning for more democratic food systems. However, as each chapter demonstrates, both the problems and the solutions in sustainable agriculture are highly contested. Using the term 'agrifood' to capture the nexus between research, governance and the environment knowledge-environment-governance, this book provides an in-depth and wide-ranging account of current research around agricultural production and food consumption.
The book introduces the Anthropocene along with the fundamental question that it poses about human-nature interactions. It outlines the core concerns related to agriculture and food and the debates around the need for agrifood system transitions. Each chapter investigates controversies in the field through case studies. These contributions offer a call for sociologists of agriculture and food to engage with the controversies unfolding in the Anthropocene.
The book introduces the Anthropocene along with the fundamental question that it poses about human-nature interactions. It outlines the core concerns related to agriculture and food and the debates around the need for agrifood system transitions. Each chapter investigates controversies in the field through case studies. These contributions offer a call for sociologists of agriculture and food to engage with the controversies unfolding in the Anthropocene.
Exploring agrifood transitions in the anthropocene
(Agri)Food for Thought on the Anthropocene
Food Systems in the Anthropocene: Some Philosophical Reflections
The Invitation of the Anthropocene: Towards a New Way of Living with All Our Relations
Governing the Agrifood Transition in the Capital-driven Anthropocene
Empirical Stories of Transitions in the Anthropocene
Does Everything Have to Change for Nothing to Change? Reduced Antibiotic Use in Intensive and Industrial Livestock Farming
Sustainable transitions for Brazilian animal agriculture in the Anthropocene: Scientific knowledge about pasture restoration
‘Anti-fish’ Campaign: Food safety and Ethical Issues of Eating Fish from Indonesia
Hunger, Obesity and Soy: The Corporate Agribusiness Diet in Argentina
Farmers, Autonomy and Biodiesel: What can we expect from Brazil’s experiment with Biodiesel for Rural Development Policy?
Disasters and Catastrophes in Agrifood Studies
Food Systems in Europe and Sub-Saharan Africa: Critical Reflections on the Interface between Food Systems and Ecosystem Services using Social Practice Theory
'Planting Seeds’ for ‘Good Growth’: Anthropocenic performances of responsibility
Interactive Innovation : New ways of knowing for the Anthropocene?
Why and how to observe agroecological transitions in the anthropocene?
Contested Agrifood Knowledge Transitions into the Anthropocene: The Case of CGIAR