@article{Maxwell_Tursunova_2014, place={Ithaca, NY, USA}, title={Voices of Peasant Farmers from the Margins of the Global Food Crisis}, volume={4}, url={https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/335}, DOI={10.5304/jafscd.2014.043.003}, abstractNote={<p><em>First paragraphs:</em></p><p>Haroon Akram-Lodhi’s <em>Hungry for Change: Farmers, Food Justice and the Agrarian Question </em>adds to the growing literature on food sovereignty and social movements from around the globe. The books <em>Food Sovereignty in Canada: Creating Just and Sustainable Food Systems </em>(2011) and <em>Food Sovereignty: Reconnecting Food, Nature and Community </em>(2010), written by scholars and agrarian activists and edited by Hannah Wittman, Annette Aurelie Desmarais, and Nettie Wiebe, detail the origins of food sovereignty and analyze food regimes and food crises. The authors outline agrarian reforms from historical and contemporary perspectives and explain the relationships between food systems, energy, climate change, environment, and food regime restructuring. Through an examination of socio-economic and environmental consequences of the food system, the authors provide examples of peasant movements that are transforming relationships between food, markets, and local and global communities. Other recent books include <em>Food Regimes and Agrarian Questions </em>by Philip McMichael (2013), <em>Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change </em>by Henry Bernstein (2010), and <em>Peasants and the Art of Farming: A Chayanovian Manifesto </em>by Jan Douwe van der Ploeg (2013). These scholars focus on the structure and dynamics of peasant farms, production and labor, and consistent marginalization of peasants as result of liberalization and globalization. Such books as <em>Food for Thought: A Multidisciplinary Discussion </em>by Robert Stewart and Susan Korol (2012) and <em>Food for Change: The Politics and Values of Social Movements </em>by Jeff Pratt and Pete Luetchford (2013) seek to address food production, distribution, and food choices people make in order to show how important alternative food movements are in creating an economic system within which individuals know where, how, and by whom their food is produced.</p><p>These influential authors address food sover­eignty issues from a systemic perspective to help their readers understand the complex relationships between agriculture, market, laws, and environment and their influences on each other both locally and on a global scale. Building on these and other books, Akram-Lodhi’s <em>Hungry for Change</em> puts a human face on agricultural development by exam­ining the socio-economic transformations in indi­vidual peasant farmers’ lives and the lives of their families as a segment of a bigger global picture. Akram-Lodhi’s approach is especially useful as an introduction for readers who wish to understand the devastating effects of the global food regimes on the lives of individuals, especially in the global South. Through personal accounts of peasant farmers, the author fills a niche in the literature by examining the process by which the world food system has become a capitalist enterprise in the hands of power holders, corporations, the IMF and World Bank, and privileged consumers in the North....</p>}, number={3}, journal={Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development}, author={Maxwell, Breann and Tursunova, Zulfiya}, year={2014}, month={May}, pages={213–215} }