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*We are looking for one additional paper to complete a two-part paper
session at the 2015 American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting  *

*Session Title: **Agricultural Labour and the Food Movement: Perspectives
and Politics*


  *Organizers:* *Charles Levkoe and Michael Ekers*



*Session Description:*

Attention to food systems issues  has increased awareness and resistance to
the dominant corporate-led industrial food system. Increasingly, people are
searching for alternatives and expressing support for food that is produced
locally and uses sustainable practices. Further, the amount of academic,
policy and political work examining the provisioning of socially and
ecologically sustainable food has emerged in response to, and indeed has
contributed to, growing transnational food movements.  Research has focused
on the establishment of 'alternative food systems' that follow
agro-ecological and/or organic production methods that try to link
consumers more directly (cognitively and physically) with farmers and
agrarian landscapes, both urban and rural.  In the academic literature and
within the food movement itself, emphasis is placed on the vitality of
small-scale farms and equitable access to quality food.  Despite the
attention on food, there is peculiar silence on the question of labour
within the food system, whether on farms, in commercial kitchens or in
non-profits. Despite some notable (and somewhat recent) exceptions, little
attention has focused on the labour and workers that underpin the growing
food movements.  Several questions follow: what new perspectives on food
system change might emerge from a more substantive engagement with
questions of labour; how are actors and institutions in the food movement
negotiating the labour question; and, how might a focus on labour justice
change these movements?


The thin engagement with the theme of labour within the food literature is
somewhat surprising given how much attention has been placed on labour
within studies of agrarian capitalism and in debates on peasantries and
family farms.  Numerous studies have focused on the contingent and
precarious forms of labour found on industrialized and family farms.  Studies
such as Miriam Wells' *Strawberry Fields *has signaled how agricultural
labour is always defined by relations of race, gender, class and migration
and, much more often than not, is exploitative and precarious.  Other
research, has examined the gender divisions of labour on family farms and
the non-waged reproductive and off-farm work that many women assume and
perform.  Additionally, debates on agrarian transformation and the
endurance of the various peasantries have dwelled at length on the shifting
identities associated with agricultural labour and have continually focused
on the productive base of food production.  What lessons might these bodies
of literature provide for our understandings of labour and the identities
of workers within the food movement? This session seeks to explore this
question while also interrogating why the labour question, so thoroughly
examined in the debates outlined above, has not featured prominently in the
recent and growing literature on food.


This session seeks to develop a dialogue between the two sets of literature
outlined above, which are topically connected yet strangely and commonly
treated in isolation from one another.  In doing so, these sessions
leverage research on food and agricultural labour to explore the various
permutations of what might be termed 'food labour' across the food system
(from production to consumption and waste management).  In particular, the
session explores the various experiences and politics of labour in the food
movement and the significance of the labour question for food system change
and transformation.

Please send your 250 word abstract to Charles Levkoe ([log in to unmask]) and
Michael Ekers ([log in to unmask]) by October 26, 2014.