Routledge Handbook of Food as a Commons

Routledge Handbook of Food as a Commons

by OlivierDeSchutter (Editor), UgoMattei (Editor), JoseLuisViveroPol (Editor), TomasoFerrando (Editor)

Synopsis

From the scientific and industrial revolution to the present day, food - an essential element of life - has been progressively transformed into a private, transnational, mono-dimensional commodity of mass consumption for a global market. But over the last decade there has been an increased recognition that this can be challenged and reconceptualized if food is regarded and enacted as a commons.

This Handbook provides the first comprehensive review and synthesis of knowledge and new thinking on how food and food systems can be thought, interpreted and practiced around the old/new paradigms of commons and commoning. The overall aim is to investigate the multiple constraints that occur within and sustain the dominant food and nutrition regime and to explore how it can change when different elements of the current food systems are explored and re-imagined from a commons perspective. Chapters do not define the notion of commons but engage with different schools of thought:

  • the economic approach, based on rivalry and excludability;
  • the political approach, recognizing the plurality of social constructions and incorporating epistemologies from the South;
  • the legal approach that describes three types of proprietary regimes (private, public and collective) and different layers of entitlement (bundles of rights);
  • and the radical-activist approach that considers the commons as the most subversive, coherent and history-rooted alternative to the dominant neoliberal narrative.

These schools have different and rather diverging epistemologies, vocabularies, ideological stances and policy proposals to deal with the construction of food systems, their governance, the distributive implications and the socio-ecological impact on Nature and Society.

The book sparks the debate on food as a commons between and within disciplines, with particular attention to spaces of resistance (food sovereignty, de-growth, open knowledge, transition town, occupations, bottom-up social innovations) and organizational scales (local food, national policies, South-South collaborations, international governance and multi-national agreements). Overall it shows the consequences in terms of food, planet and living beings of a shift to the alternative paradigm of food as a commons.

$248.68

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 31 Dec 2018

ISBN 10: 1138062626
ISBN 13: 9781138062627

Author Bio
Jose Luis Vivero-Pol is a Research Fellow on food governance and agri-food transitions at the Centre for the Philosophy of Law and the Earth and Life Institute, Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium. Tomaso Ferrando is Lecturer in Law at the University of Bristol Law School. He has been Visiting Professor at the Universita' di Torino and Universidad Externado de Colombia, and Resident Fellow at the Institute for Global Law and Policy at Harvard Law School. He is an active member of the Legal Action Committee of the Global Legal Action Network and the Extraterritorial Obligation Consortium. Olivier de Schutter is Professor at the Catholic University of Louvain, SciencesPo Paris (France) and the College of Europe (Natolin). He has been Visiting Professor at Yale, UCLA and Columbia universities in the USA. He is a member of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of the United Nations and co-chair of IPES-Food, the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems. Formerly, he was the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food and the chair of the EU Network of Independent Experts on Fundamental Rights. Ugo Mattei is Alfred and Hannah Fromm Professor in International Law at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, USA, and Professor of Civil Law at the University of Turin, Italy. Previously, he was Professor at the University of Trento and Visiting Professor at Montpellier University, Berkeley, Macau, Yale and Cambridge.