The Revolution Must be Edible! Agrodiversity, Urban Gardening, and Food Sovereignty Film Festival and Roundtable Discussion

Date: 
November 16, 2011 - 17:30 - 19:30
Building: 
Nador u. 9, Faculty Tower
Room: 
Auditorium
Event type: 
Film Screening
Event audience: 
Open to the Public
Organizer(s): 
Vedegylet
The Revolution Must be Edible! Agrodiversity, Urban Gardening, and Food Sovereignty Film Festival and Roundtable Discussion

 

The Revolution Must be Edible! Agrodiversity, Urban Gardening, and Food Sovereignty Film Festival and Roundtable Discussion

How can agriculture reduce its dependence on fossil energy? What is the role of biodiversity and seed-saving in agricultural systems? What are urban gardeners and small-scale farmers all over the world doing to address the food and climate change crises? And how can we analyze these issues from an environmental and social justice perspective?

The Environmental and Social Justice Action Research Group and Vedegylet invite you to join us to discuss these issues and find out more about permaculture, seed sovereignty and food justice movements around the world!

 

 

 

FILM SCHEDULE:
A Farm for the Future, (Rebecca Hosking, BBC,2009, 48 min.) investigates how to transform a family farm in Devon, England into a low energy system.

Banking Diversity, (USC Canada, 2010, 8 min.) highlights community seed banks in Ethiopia and explains the critical role that seed-saving and seed diversity play in ensuring a stable global food supply.

Seeds  for Change, (Vedegylet, 2011, 7 min.) documents the first international seed swap held in Szeged, Hungary last year in conjunction with the 6th European Forum on Agrodiversity, "Let's liberate diversity!"

Dig for Victory, (UK Ministry for Information, 1942, 6 min.) provides a historical perspective on the trend of urban gardening in times of crisis.

Reap what you sow, Eat what you grow, (Suma Josson, 2011, 11 min.) documents the work of Urban Leaves, an urban organic agriculture movement in Mumbai, India, showing how applying ecological principles and practices to maintain soil fertility and crop health is especially relevant in urban settings, and how urban gardens build community.

La Via Campesina in Movement...Food Sovereignty Now!  (LVC, 2010, 9 min. clip) presents social movements' struggles for peasant agriculture and food sovereignty all around the world.

ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION:

The films will be followed by comments by:
Adam Fulop,   Reclaim the Fields
Csilla Kiss, Vedegylet
Itai Tanyanyiwa, PhD student, Dept. of Env. Science and Policy
Facilitated by Guntra Aistara, CEU Environmental and Social Justice Action Research Group and the Department of Environmental Science and Policy

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