Author Archives: shumbusho

Food Security in an Urbanising Society Short Course

This course focuses on how rural production and urban markets can be integrated to assure access to adequate quantities of nutritious food while sustaining the viability of the production areas. This year the  Food Security in an Urbanizing Society short course will be given again by Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

It is possible to apply for a NUFFIC fellowship.The deadline to apply for the Nuffic fellowships for the FSUS course in 2016 is the 22 of March.

For more information on the course and fellowship applications

National food strategy: Are we there yet? (Waterloo Region Record)

With a new federal government and new Agriculture Minister (Lawrence MacAulay) in Ottawa, many people are deliberating on the notion of a national food strategy for Canada. In recent years, many Canadian political parties, think tanks, and trade associations have recommended Canada’s need for such a strategy. In fact, most of us by now have lost count of how many strategies have been proposed. Nonetheless, many in the industry question whether Ottawa will set priorities to develop a national food strategy. Read more……

Food Policy Article Series: Exploring Stories of Local Government Food Systems Planning and Policy Innovation

On behalf of the Growing Food Connections team, we are excited to announce the addition of 5 free publications to the Exploring Stories of Innovation series, a series of short articles that explore how local governments from across the United States are strengthening their community’s food system through planning and policy. These include:

  1. City of Burlington and Chittenden County, Vermont
  2. City of Cleveland, Ohio
  3. City of Minneapolis, Minnesota
  4. City of Lawrence and Douglas County, Kansas
  5. City of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Beginning in 2012, Growing Food Connections (GFC) conducted a national scan and identified 299 local governments across the United States that are developing and implementing a range of innovative plans, public programs, regulations, laws, financial investments and other policies to strengthen the food system. GFC conducted exploratory telephone interviews with 20 of these local governments. This series highlights some of the unique planning and policy strategies used by some of these urban and rural local governments to enhance community food security while ensuring sustainable and economically viable agriculture and food production. The first four articles in the series featured:

  1. City of Seattle, Washington
  2. Baltimore City, Maryland
  3. Cabarrus County, North Carolina
  4. Lancaster County, Pennsylvania

For more information…..

Special Forum: The rise of flex crops and commodities: implications for research (Journal of Peasant Studies)

As a concept and phenomenon, ‘flex crops and commodities’ feature ‘multiple-ness’ and ‘flexible-ness’ as two distinct but intertwined dimensions. These key crops and commodities are shaped by the changing global context that is itself remoulded by the convergence of multiple crises and various responses. The greater multiple-ness of crops and commodity uses has altered the patterns of their production, circulation and consumption, as novel dimensions of their political economy. These new patterns change the power relations between landholders, agricultural labourers, crop exporters, processors and traders; in particular, they intensify market competition among producers and incentivize changes in land-tenure arrangements. Crop and commodity flexing have three main types – namely, real flexing, anticipated/speculative flexing and imagined flexing; these have many intersections and interactions. Their political-economic dynamics involve numerous factors that variously incentivize, facilitate or hinder the ‘multiple-ness’ and/or ‘flexible-ness’ of particular crops and commodities. These dynamics include ‘flex narratives’ by corporate and state institutions to justify promotion of a flex agenda through support policies. In particular, a bioeconomy narrative envisages a future ‘value web’ developing more flexible value chains through more interdependent, interchangeable products and uses. A future research agenda should investigate questions about material bases, real-life changes, flex narratives and political mobilization.

For more information…..

TRIPARTITE CALL FOR PROPOSALS

Thought for Food Initiative

Transdisciplinary research towards more sustainable food systems

[Ref. CfP 2015-07]

TERMS OF REFERENCE FINAL VERSION 01 DECEMBER 2015

Agropolis Fondation, Fondazione Cariplo and Fondation Daniel et Nina Carasso signed in October 2015 a Partnership Agreement expressing common objective of contributing to address sustainability of agriculture and food systems issues by collectively supporting international scientific projects from developed and developing countries.

Under the overall theme of “sustainable agriculture and food systems,” the Thought for Food initiative Open Call for Proposals covers two strands, namely: (a) Diverse agricultural production for more sustainable food systems and diets; and (b) sustainable food processing for more sustainable and healthy diets.

Under this collaboration, the three European foundations will support collaborative and multidisciplinary scientific research projects and research projects with a capacity building component in a common effort to contribute to the understanding and promotion of a holistic approach to sustainable food systems.

For more information… TOR_CfP_Thought_for_Food[2]

The Coalition for Healthy School Food presses health ministers to take action on children’s health

In the face of rising costs of healthy food, increasing healthcare costs, and skyrocketing chronic diseases rates, it is time Canadian health ministers took measures to ensure that children in Canada grow up knowing about and eating healthy food. The Coalition for Healthy School Food is calling on federal, provincial and territorial ministers of health to discuss the development of a national healthy school food program, funded in part by the federal government, at their meeting in Vancouver January 20 and 21.

Canada’s children and youth face serious food-related challenges: only one-third of children between the ages of 4 and 13 years eat five or more servings of vegetables and fruit daily; one-third of students in elementary schools and two-thirds of students in secondary schools do not eat a nutritious breakfast before school, leaving them at risk for learning, behavioural, and health challenges at school; and one-quarter of children’s calorie intakes are from food products not recommended in Canada’s Food Guide.

“This is a problem we can no longer afford to ignore,” says Sasha McNicoll, Coordinator of the Coalition for Healthy School Food at Food Secure Canada. “The federal government has already taken promising steps in announcing funding for social infrastructure and a national food policy to promote healthy living. We believe this policy should start with children. Building on the programs at the provincial and territorial level, federal investments will ensure that Canadian children develop healthy eating habits that will last a lifetime.”

School food programs, which currently receive piecemeal funding from provinces and municipalities, have shown to increase consumption of fruits and vegetables, improve physical and mental health, decrease behavioural and emotional problems, improve educational outcomes, and increase graduation rates.

Given all the positive implications, it is difficult to understand why Canada remains one of the only industrialized countries not to fund a school food program. With leadership emerging on healthy school food programs from the Governments of Alberta, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the City of Toronto, the federal government has a huge role to play in leading a collaborative approach to this issue with provincial, territorial, municipal and Indigenous governments.

“Children in British Columbia who participate in healthy school food programs have been shown to eat more fruits and vegetables and fewer unhealthy foods,” says Brent Mansfield, Director of the BC Food Systems Network, a member of the Coalition for Healthy School Food. “A federal investment will leverage provincial efforts to improve the health of all Canadian children.”

“School food programs that provide children with healthy food and nutrition literacy have an incredible potential through improvements in population health to reduce long-term healthcare costs,” says Dr. Victoria Crosbie, a pediatrician and the Chair of the Kids Eat Smart Foundation Newfoundland and Labrador, a member of the Coalition for Healthy School Food. “Addressing the social determinants of health is vital to turning the tide of chronic disease.”

For more information…..