28 episodes

Food is central to our identity. It helps us to define who we are, and our place in our home, our community and our world. It shapes the social interactions in which we engage, with our friends, with our families, and with our community. In so doing, food connects us, to ourselves and to each other.

But contemporary access to food presents some of the most stark examples of human inequality that we witness on a regular basis. All of us need food to survive, day in and day out. Most of us want more from our food than just survival: we seek pleasure in taste, texture, smell and sight. We seek pleasure in sharing food with others. When we walk into a supermarket, we are confronted with a cornucopia of choice from around the world that enables us to seek this pleasure. Most of us have no idea where the food in the supermarket comes from, and most of us give this no thought, focusing merely upon what we need to acquire to seek the pleasure that we want to get from the food that we buy to eat.

We know, of course, that many of us cannot afford to seek that pleasure from food and its sharing, and have to settle for surviving. We know that far too many in our communities cannot afford to make the choices that we can in a supermarket, having to rely upon the charity of food banks to survive. Indeed, many of us face profound difficulties in doing even that. We know that we live in a world in which unparalleled hunger can be found, in places both far and near, as too many simply don't get enough food.

The world food system is designed to enable you to understand how our food system, with its unparalleled abundance and immense scarcity, came to be, unpacking the key factors shaping contemporary production, distribution, access to and consumption of food, both here and elsewhere. After all, if we want the world to become a better place it seems that a good place to start would be on our plates.

The World Food System A. Haroon Akram-Lodhi

    • Education

Food is central to our identity. It helps us to define who we are, and our place in our home, our community and our world. It shapes the social interactions in which we engage, with our friends, with our families, and with our community. In so doing, food connects us, to ourselves and to each other.

But contemporary access to food presents some of the most stark examples of human inequality that we witness on a regular basis. All of us need food to survive, day in and day out. Most of us want more from our food than just survival: we seek pleasure in taste, texture, smell and sight. We seek pleasure in sharing food with others. When we walk into a supermarket, we are confronted with a cornucopia of choice from around the world that enables us to seek this pleasure. Most of us have no idea where the food in the supermarket comes from, and most of us give this no thought, focusing merely upon what we need to acquire to seek the pleasure that we want to get from the food that we buy to eat.

We know, of course, that many of us cannot afford to seek that pleasure from food and its sharing, and have to settle for surviving. We know that far too many in our communities cannot afford to make the choices that we can in a supermarket, having to rely upon the charity of food banks to survive. Indeed, many of us face profound difficulties in doing even that. We know that we live in a world in which unparalleled hunger can be found, in places both far and near, as too many simply don't get enough food.

The world food system is designed to enable you to understand how our food system, with its unparalleled abundance and immense scarcity, came to be, unpacking the key factors shaping contemporary production, distribution, access to and consumption of food, both here and elsewhere. After all, if we want the world to become a better place it seems that a good place to start would be on our plates.

    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 3: Examples of agroecology

    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 3: Examples of agroecology

    Agroecology in action demonstrates its capacity to feed people, cool the climate, and produce a living wage.

    • 13 min
    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 2: What is agroecology?

    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 2: What is agroecology?

    The principals of agroecology are reviewed and the ways in which it meets the challenges that need to be met by contemporary agriculture are established.

    • 12 min
    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 1: Why not organic?

    EP 07 An alternative food system? Agroecology PT 1: Why not organic?

    The multiple crises of the corporate food regime suggest that an alternative food system needs to be developed. However, the rapid growth of transnational organic suggests that organic agricultural systems are not necessarily the basis by which an alternative food system might be envisaged. As a food production system, a rural development programme and a political movement agroecology has the potential to feed the world, cool the planet, and generate a living wage for all.

    An agro-food complex constructed upon the basis of organic agriculture need not be sustainable.

    • 11 min
    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 4: COVID-19 and the corporate food regime

    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 4: COVID-19 and the corporate food regime

    The mechanisms by which industrial agriculture increases the likelihood of zoonotic diseases are reviewed.

    • 8 min
    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 2: Crisis and food prices

    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 2: Crisis and food prices

    The ways in which changing patterns in the demand for food might impact upon food prices is reviewed.

    • 11 min
    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 3: Crisis in the supply of food

    EP 06 Crisis and the demand for food PT 3: Crisis in the supply of food

    The ways in which emerging constraints upon the production of food might impact upon food prices is reviewed, before evaluating the relative merits of both demand- and supply-side explanations of rising food prices.

    • 12 min

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