Canadians have achieved unprecedented levels of efficiency in the production and distribution of food. So how come it is undermining our health and well-being? "The Food Wars” have turned Canada into a colony and a colonialist. Our agriculture has been intensely specialized to satisfy the demand and supply of foreign markets by a handful of corporations. Yet growing and preparing domestic food is becoming increasingly marginal to mainstream Canadian consumers. We rely more and more heavily on people inside and outside the country to do it for us. This article is really about context, about us as Canadian citizens, producers, and consumers. As such, it represents the terrain within which the social economy must contend
Also published in the Ottawa Citizen on May 1, 2014French version available in IDRC Digital Library:...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Health, Faculty of Health, School of Health Policy and Management, ...
Food security is a growing societal challenge. The pressure to feed a projected global population of...
Amidst the rising acrimony over how we expect to feed ourselves in the next 50 years, three main sch...
This article examines the connections between agriculture, alternative food movements, and s...
This is another article on context. In this case, the key trend of "market fragmentation" is introdu...
The food sovereignty movement initiated in 1996 by a transnational organization of peasants, La Via ...
While the competitiveness of the Canadian agri-food sector attracted significant research attention ...
This article examines the political economy of nutrition as a state-sponsored strategy to extract gr...
The history of Canadian food and agriculture is an enormous topic with both a global and deeply pers...
This article traces the evolution of agriculture from a staples to a mature staples sector in the po...
Food is a vital component of modern warfare and during the Second World War Canada used its agricult...
ABSTRACT This article explores food-related activities and their impacts on sustainable livelihood...
Health and Sustainability in the Canadian Food System: Advocacy and Opportunity for Civil Society.Ed...
Canada has a long history of civil society involvement in food activism. While neo-liberal developme...
Also published in the Ottawa Citizen on May 1, 2014French version available in IDRC Digital Library:...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Health, Faculty of Health, School of Health Policy and Management, ...
Food security is a growing societal challenge. The pressure to feed a projected global population of...
Amidst the rising acrimony over how we expect to feed ourselves in the next 50 years, three main sch...
This article examines the connections between agriculture, alternative food movements, and s...
This is another article on context. In this case, the key trend of "market fragmentation" is introdu...
The food sovereignty movement initiated in 1996 by a transnational organization of peasants, La Via ...
While the competitiveness of the Canadian agri-food sector attracted significant research attention ...
This article examines the political economy of nutrition as a state-sponsored strategy to extract gr...
The history of Canadian food and agriculture is an enormous topic with both a global and deeply pers...
This article traces the evolution of agriculture from a staples to a mature staples sector in the po...
Food is a vital component of modern warfare and during the Second World War Canada used its agricult...
ABSTRACT This article explores food-related activities and their impacts on sustainable livelihood...
Health and Sustainability in the Canadian Food System: Advocacy and Opportunity for Civil Society.Ed...
Canada has a long history of civil society involvement in food activism. While neo-liberal developme...
Also published in the Ottawa Citizen on May 1, 2014French version available in IDRC Digital Library:...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Health, Faculty of Health, School of Health Policy and Management, ...
Food security is a growing societal challenge. The pressure to feed a projected global population of...