Find us on Facebook

U.S. #breastfeeding leadership: want to close racial disparity in BF rates? Look in the mirror. http://t.co/BuudzlOvNK @iamKSealsAllers

Subscribe to our email newsletter


Blog

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Video: Busting the "feeding the world" myth of industrial agriculture

See video

IATP has long recognized that many of the drivers of the destructive industrial food system are not based on a sound rationale, but instead on a series of corporate marketing myths. IATP Food and Community Fellow Raj Patel, for example, has recently been taking on the false assumptions that contributed to the Green Revolution and the revitalized interest in a new Green Revolution.

Another common assumption is that we have a moral obligation to “feed the world,” and that we should not only embrace chemically intensive, industrial food production and distribution systems for profit, but also to fulfill a moral obligation to feed hungry people in other parts of the world. It’s an extremely effective frame. Surely you’re not willing to ignore the plight of the hungry in order to selfishly provide local wildlife habitat or eat local and organic foods?

IATP has researched the relationship between U.S. grain exports and hunger, an important component of this myth. A recent report by IATP Senior Associate Julia Olmstead reveals that dramatic increases in U.S. grain production and export has not alleviated global hunger.

This confirms the conclusions of the exhaustive review conducted for the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD), which found that inadequate income and the inability of countries facing hunger to develop their own sustainable food systems are important drivers to hunger that are often ignored in the drive...

Friday, October 19, 2012

The Full School Food Equation

Originally published on the Huffington Post.

The first time you hand a child an apple instead of a cookie, or a baked sweet potato wedge instead of a French fry, he is bound to be disappointed. Similarly, the first time you give a child a math textbook, he may come home frustrated with fractions. But we don't give up on our kids with math, and we shouldn't give up on them with healthy food. We simply can't afford to.

Americans now spend an estimated $190 billion on healthcare costs associated with obesity and diet-related disease. Two weeks ago, Mission: Readiness, an organization led by retired senior military leaders, released its new report, "Still Too Fat to Fight." The publication documents the national security risk of having one in four of our young people be unfit (literally) for military service. The stakes around healthier school lunches are much higher than apples thrown in the trash.

Every child deserves a lunch that is healthy, that tastes...

Monday, October 15, 2012

Land and Power in Detroit

From Be Black and Green.

In the mid-1970s, I was a member of the Detroit-based Pan-African Congress, USA. Inspired by the South African political party, the Pan-Africanist Congress, the PAC-USA, asserted that “land is the basis of power.” Of course, this slogan echoed the words of Malcolm X and countless other Black activists before him. It embodied the understanding that it is from the land that we get the food that sustains our lives. It is from the land that we get the materials needed for housing, and clothing. It is from the land that we get mineral resources that feed economies and generate wealth. It is on the land that we build, grow and create community. As we struggle to foster food security, food justice and food sovereignty, the question of land, who “owns” it, who controls it and who benefits from it, must be in the forefront of our discussions.

Many forces have shaped the past 700 years of human history, but none as profoundly as the global imperial expansion by England, France, Spain, Portugal and Germany. The centuries long conquest, colonization, enslavement, domination and exploitation of Africans and other people of color and their lands was deeply rooted in a white supremacist worldview. European explorers came to the shores of West Africa and the east coast of what we now call the United States, with ideas about the private ownership of land that...

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Video: Jenga Mwendo on Be Black and Green

See video

In this video from Be Black and Green, a site that networks, supports and promotes Black farmers, gardeners and food activists, Jenga Mwendo of the Backyard Gardeners Network explains how gardening can be a tool for community development in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans.

View Part Two of the series.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Building Gardens, Rebuilding Community

Originally Published on Loop 21.

When Jenga Mwendo, 34, bought a house in her hometown New Orleans in 2005, it was meant to be an investment property. Instead, it turned out to be the first step in her passion for connecting people, healing the community and bringing much needed healthy, affordable, fresh food to the neighborhood where she was born and raised, the Lower Ninth.

When she first purchased the fixer-upper, Mwendo was living in New York City with her daughter, Azana, who was 3-years-old at the time, and working at Blue Sky Studios, as a computer animator.

“I had been in New York for 10 years, coming here to go to school. I always felt that I had to leave New Orleans to reach my goals,” she says.  “I thought I might eventually go back to New Orleans to live in the house but it wasn’t an immediate plan,”

Though Mwendo had a successful career, she always felt there was something missing. She says that giving back and being entrenched in the fabric of a community were a part of her DNA. Raised by parents who had been active in New Orleans for generations, including playing a role in the Black Liberation Party, Mwendo understood the importance of being a part of a community.

“I was making a lot of money working at Blue Sky, but I had to ask myself, if I died tomorrow, what did I...

Friday, October 5, 2012

Chipotle signs fair food agreement with CIW

After a six year struggle, Chipotle Mexican Grill has signed an agreement with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to join the Fair Food Program. This victory came just days before a massive CIW action was to take place at the Chipotle "Cultivate Festival" near its headquarters in Denver, Colorado and represents a historic moment for the Food Justice movement. "After six long years, people all across the country have added their own grain of sand to this growing movement," IATP Food and Community Fellow Kandace Vallejo said in an email about the victory.

The agreement, which will improve wages and working conditions for farmworkers in Florida who pick tomatoes for Chipotle, comes in advance of the winter tomato-growing season, when most of the nation’s tomatoes come from growers in Florida.

The Fair Food Program provides a bonus for tomato pickers to improve wages and binds growers to protocols and a code of conduct that explicitly include a voice for workers in health and safety issues, worker-to-worker education on the new protections under the code, and a complaint resolution procedure which workers can use without fear of...

Monday, October 1, 2012

What an expiring Farm Bill means to you

It has always been an amusing pastime for agricultural policy wonks to envision what would happen if a Farm Bill was allowed to expire. Nobody actually thought that it could come to fruition; after all, the uncertainty that it would impose on farmers and agricultural markets would be too great for Congress not to act on passing a new Farm Bill. Yet, remarkably, it has happened as of today.

The current Farm Bill, passed in 2008, expired on September 30. The Senate passed a bill over the summer, and the House has yet to have a floor vote on the bill that emerged from the House Agriculture committee, and will not have a vote prior to September 30. There is a lot of guessing about the overall impacts of an expired Farm Bill, and the media is already full of stories of the stalemate and frustrating lack of Congressional action.

So for those of us not farming or trading agricultural commodities, what impact would this legislative breakdown have on our lives? It’s a complicated question, because some programs would most likely continue unchanged, some programs would disappear and some programs would revert to “permanent law” of Farm Bills past. Overall, it appears that an incorporation of policies from the 1930s and 1940s...

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Chef as diplomat: Bryant Terry selected for State Department's American Chef Corps

IATP Food and Community Fellow Bryant Terry was named a member of the American Chef Corps, part of the State Department's Diplomatic Culinary Partnership. The American Chef Corps will create a network of more than 80 culinary leaders dedicated to sharing the diverse culinary traditions of the United States by hosting meals for diplomats and providing cooking demonstrations at home or abroad, among other opportunities.

In a video address, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton explains the unlikely alliance between the State Department and this network of America's top chefs: "Food isn't traditionally thought of as a diplomatic tool, but I think it's the oldest diplomatic tool. Sharing a meal can help people transcend boundaries and build bridges in a way that nothing else can."

Although some have aruged that the list of chefs is a bit East Coast-centric, the new program overall represents an important recognition of the power of food from plate to politics.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

American Voices: Haile Johnston

This video essay featuring Haile Johnston was part of the American Voices segment on PBS's Need to Know. The essay was part of a larger segment on childhood obesity, produced by Nicole Betancourt of Parent Earth.

Watch the video essay at PBS Need to Know.

 Common Market is a nonprofit, local food distribution company, and we got started basically in response to the struggles that a lot of communities were having, accessing good food. Part of the vision of Common Market was actually to make local and sustainably grown food more affordable and accessible to all.  It is an exciting time in a lot of ways, because there’s a lot of creativity and innovations happening around re-envisioning what the food system looks like, and re-envisioning regional economies.

One of the reasons why you see natural foods and organic foods in the market being far more expensive is the system for...

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Can meal planning subscriptions help families eat better?

Originally published in the New York Times.

After her first daughter was born, Lindsey Swank Meili realized that something had to give, and that something was cooking dinner. Several nights a week, she ordered Chinese food or pizza. When she did cook, it was the same old stuff: meatloaf, chicken and lots of pasta.

There were consequences. Ms. Swank Meili, who lives in Athens, Ohio, kept on an extra 10 pounds after the first baby in 2009 and was worried the same thing would happen after her second daughter was born last year. But with a three-hour window after work to prepare dinner, pack lunches, do laundry and get the girls to bed, there didn’t seem to be another way.

Then last fall, Ms. Swank Meili, 30, stumbled onto an ad for the Fresh20, a meal-planning service that provides recipes for a week’s worth of healthy dinners. Monday might be ginger and garlic pork with snow peas and red peppers; Friday, Napa rice noodle salad with Asian peanut dressing and mangoes. The week’s shopping list has 20 ingredients and is calibrated to eliminate waste (snow peas, carrots and red peppers appear in both days’ meals) and to cost $75 for five dinners for a family of four, or $3.75 a person per meal.

Ms. Swank Meili now...

Meet the Fellows

Nina Kahori Fallenbaum

Nina Kahori Fallenbaum, the food and agriculture editor of Hyphen magazine, uses independent media to engage Asian American communities in local and national food policy.

Ideas in focus

Cultivating Leadership and Equity in the Food Movement

April 2013

The IATP Food and Community Fellows Program is coming to an end, but it's springtime for our work growing equity in the food system and cultivating diverse leadership in the movement.

Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

2105 First Ave. S. / Minneapolis, Minnesota 55404
(612) 870-0453 / Fax (612) 870-4846

Issues

Blog

Library

Events

Media

About IATP

CONNECT WITH IATP
IATP on Facebook   IATP on Twitter   IATP on YouTube