Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research

Researchers committed to food justice often enter communities and nonprofits with a desire to help. They often think there is a scarcity, such as food, that they want to understand and help to increase. At the same time, research obligations may lead to extracting "findings" without advanc...

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Main Author: Joshua Sbicca
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thomas A. Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems 2016-10-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/361
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spelling doaj-0762fc9612454c8bb1b9dd5da32a50532020-11-25T03:33:13ZengThomas A. Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food SystemsJournal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development2152-08012016-10-015410.5304/jafscd.2015.054.004361Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice ResearchJoshua Sbicca0Colorado State UniversityResearchers committed to food justice often enter communities and nonprofits with a desire to help. They often think there is a scarcity, such as food, that they want to understand and help to increase. At the same time, research obligations may lead to extracting "findings" without advancing food justice. Such actions may unintentionally work against food justice, especially the goal of dismantling structural inequalities and advancing social equity. This commentary chronicles the ongoing and incomplete process by which I have carried out food justice research and worked toward food justice. In short, reciprocal research requires working with, not for, organizations and communities. This entails ongoing acts of solidarity. One way to express this is through flexibility with research goals in order to tailor all or parts of one's project to answer questions that increase understanding of how to challenge structural inequalities and advance social equity. Relatedly, openness to how food justice activists and organizations confront the food movement and society more broadly to address whiteness, privilege, racial inequality, and notions of diversity can enrich critical social science. Of equal importance is sweat equity. Most food justice activists and organizations have few resources and cannot serve the whims of researchers. Therefore, providing labor is an important allied act. This increases the researchers' empathy with activists, organizations, and communities, and creates opportunities to build trust and dissolve social boundaries. To enter into a situation that deepens our knowledge of the food justice movement and advances food justice requires solidarity and sweat equity.https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/361AllyshipAnti-OppressionAnti-RacismFood StudiesFood MovementFood Justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua Sbicca
spellingShingle Joshua Sbicca
Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
Allyship
Anti-Oppression
Anti-Racism
Food Studies
Food Movement
Food Justice
author_facet Joshua Sbicca
author_sort Joshua Sbicca
title Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
title_short Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
title_full Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
title_fullStr Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
title_full_unstemmed Solidarity and Sweat Equity: For Reciprocal Food Justice Research
title_sort solidarity and sweat equity: for reciprocal food justice research
publisher Thomas A. Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems
series Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
issn 2152-0801
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Researchers committed to food justice often enter communities and nonprofits with a desire to help. They often think there is a scarcity, such as food, that they want to understand and help to increase. At the same time, research obligations may lead to extracting "findings" without advancing food justice. Such actions may unintentionally work against food justice, especially the goal of dismantling structural inequalities and advancing social equity. This commentary chronicles the ongoing and incomplete process by which I have carried out food justice research and worked toward food justice. In short, reciprocal research requires working with, not for, organizations and communities. This entails ongoing acts of solidarity. One way to express this is through flexibility with research goals in order to tailor all or parts of one's project to answer questions that increase understanding of how to challenge structural inequalities and advance social equity. Relatedly, openness to how food justice activists and organizations confront the food movement and society more broadly to address whiteness, privilege, racial inequality, and notions of diversity can enrich critical social science. Of equal importance is sweat equity. Most food justice activists and organizations have few resources and cannot serve the whims of researchers. Therefore, providing labor is an important allied act. This increases the researchers' empathy with activists, organizations, and communities, and creates opportunities to build trust and dissolve social boundaries. To enter into a situation that deepens our knowledge of the food justice movement and advances food justice requires solidarity and sweat equity.
topic Allyship
Anti-Oppression
Anti-Racism
Food Studies
Food Movement
Food Justice
url https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/361
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