TY - JOUR AU - Everson, David PY - 2020/10/26 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Indigenizing food sovereignty JF - Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development JA - J. Agric. Food Syst. Community Dev. VL - 10 IS - 1 SE - Review DO - 10.5304/jafscd.2020.101.021 UR - https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/884 SP - 273–275 AB - <p><em>First paragraph:</em></p><p>It has been nearly 25 years since the international peasants’ movement <em>La Via Campesina </em>outlined a “food sovereignty” framework at the 1996 World Food Summit. Since that time, the broader food sovereignty movement continues to accelerate, drawing renewed attention as the escalating climate crisis and global pandemic lay bare the corporate food system’s production of environmental and racial injustices. Despite its institutionalization in a growing number of academic food studies pro­grams, however, food sovereignty’s theorization and praxis continue to be shaped in contexts typically absent of Indigenous voices. This is a starkly ironic reality considering that corporate food systems in settler-colonial societies like Canada and the United States are enabled by the ongoing hoarding of Indigenous ecological resources. . . .</p> ER -