Resource Review
Food Sovereignty Resources
Articles, factsheets & reports
Nyeleni 2007 Definition of Food Sovereignty
Nyeleni European Declaration from the European Forum in Krems, Austria, August 2011
The People's Convention on Food Sovereignty
Food Sovereignty: Taking back control of our food system, A War on Want position paper, August 2011 by Graciela Romero
Primer on People's Food Sovereignty
Food Sovereignty: Towards democracy in localised food systems, Michael Windfuhr and Jennie Jonsén FIAN-International
Land Strugggles, LRAN Briefing Paper, 2007
Leadership Development and Formação in Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement (MST) By Dawn M. Plummer, Masters Thesis
Reclaim the Fields Bulletins
Communicating the right to food sovereignty: The voice of the Campesino in the Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform, Alana Mann University of Sydney, Australia
The Landless Rural Workers Movement and Democracy in Brazil, Miguel Carter, American University
Interview with João Pedro Stedile, Landless battalions, The Sem Terra Movement of Brazil
An article from Do or Die Issue 7: Occupy, Resist, Produce
Brasil's Landless Peasants - Movimento Sem Terra
Repeasantization By Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau and Justin Myers
Modules on Food Sovereignty, People's Coalition on Food Sovereignty and Pesticide Action Network Asia and the Pacific, 2006
Securing future food: towards ecological food provision, UK Food Group briefing 2010
6 Food Sovereignty Principles, factsheet by Grassroots International
Books
Food Sovereignty, Reconnecting Food, Nature and Community, edited by Hannah Wittman, Annette Aurelie Desmarais & Nettie Wiebe, Food First Books, Oakland, US 2010
Introduction to Food Sovereignty. Food and Democracy edited by Marcin Gerwin (free e-book)
Local Food: How to make it happen in your community, Tazmin Pinkerton & Rob Hopkins
Fatal Harvest: The Tragedy of Industrial Agriculture, edited by Andrew Kimbrell
Websites
La Via Campesina
Reclaim the Fields
Key Learning Events
Food Sovereignty Day: Building a movement to reclaim our food system, House of Commons, 18th October 2011
South West Food Sovereignty Skillshare, Glastonbury, 15th October 2011
The Land is Ours Gathering, Dorset, October 2011
Other Transition Glastonbury Food Group & Somerset Community Food events Jan-Oct 2011
Digiphon
Mahara. Microsoft Word. Inspiration 7.5. Text edit. Gimp. CloverDiary. Wordpress. iPhoto. Fontbook. Digital camera. Macbook. Firefox
Appendix 2: The Principles of Food Sovereignty
1. Focuses on Food for People: Food sovereignty stresses the right to sufficient, healthy and culturally appropriate food for all individuals, peoples and communities, including those who are hungry or living under occupation, in conflict zones and marginalized. Food sovereignty rejects the proposition that food is just another commodity for international agribusiness.
2. Values Food Providers: Food sovereignty values and supports the contributions, and respects the rights, of women and men, peasants and small scale family farmers, pastoralists, artisanal fishers, forest dwellers, indigenous peoples and agricultural and fisheries workers, including migrants, who cultivate, grow, harvest and process food; and rejects those policies, actions and programs that undervalue them, threaten their livelihoods and eliminate them.
3. Localizes Food Systems: Food sovereignty brings food providers and consumers together in common cause; puts providers and consumers at the center of decision- making on food issues; protects food providers from the dumping of food and food aid in local markets; protects consumers from poor quality and unhealthy food, inappropriate food aid and food tainted with genetically modified organisms; and resists governance structures, agreements and practices that depend on and promote unsustainable and inequitable international trade and give power to remote and unaccountable corporations.
4. Makes Decisions Locally: Food sovereignty seeks control over and access to territory, land, grazing, water, seeds, livestock and fish populations for local food providers. These resources ought to be used and shared in socially and environmentally sustainable ways which conserve diversity. Food sovereignty recognizes that local territories often cross geopolitical borders and advances the right of local communities to inhabit and use their territories; it promotes positive interaction between food providers in different regions and territories and from different sectors to resolve internal conflicts or conflicts with local and national authorities; and rejects the privatization of natural resources through laws, commercial contracts and intellectual property rights regimes.
5. Builds Knowledge and Skills: Food sovereignty builds on the skills and local knowl- edge of food providers and their local organizations that conserve, develop and manage localized food production and harvesting systems, developing appropriate research sys- tems to support this and passing on this wisdom to future generations. Food sovereignty rejects technologies that undermine, threaten or contaminate these, e.g. genetic engineering.
6. Works with Nature: Food sovereignty uses the contributions of nature in diverse, low external input agroecological production and harvesting methods that maximize the contribution of ecosystems and improve resilience and adaptation, especially in the face of climate change. Food sovereignty seeks to heal the planet so that the planet may heal us; and, rejects methods that harm beneficial ecosystem functions, that depend on en- ergy intensive monocultures and livestock factories, destructive fishing practices and other industrialized production methods, which damage the environment and contribute to global warming.
Source: Nyéléni 2007 - Forum for Food Sovereignty, February 23rd – 27th, 2007, Sélingué, Mali, Synthesis Report - http://www.nyeleni2007.org/spip.php?article334
Appendix 3: Energy Review
| Project | Energy to Organise | Cost | Levels of Collaboration | Effect | Cost/Benefit Analysis |
| Survey | Minimal | 0 | Minimal | 65 completions, greater strategy for group | Worthwile |
| Monkton Wyld Court LAND Visit | Moderate | 0 to group £250 to Permaculture Association | Small working group | 25 in attendence, all positive feedback | Worthwhile, needs dedicated contact & organiser |
| Harvest Show | High | Below £500 | Small working group | ||
| Permaculture: Growing edge film showing | Low | £2 on printing | Minimal | Over 65 attendees | Worthwhile |
| Fruit Trees for All project | High | £124 on printing | Small working group on with local group collaboration | Hundreds of trees sold | Worthwhile |
| Fruit Preservation Skillshare | Low | £20 | Minimal | 20 people learning how to make jam, totally DIY | Worthwhile |
| Torganics visit | Low | £0 | Minimal | 12 people visited CSA | Worthwhile, only stress was transport arrangements |
| South West Food Sovereignty Skillshare |
High | £40 travel expenses | Small working group | Over 40 people discussing food sovereignty | Worthwhile but could be made more low energy to organise |