Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South

Neoliberal economic frameworks threaten the ability of marginalized people worldwide to grow, harvest, and access sufficient healthy food because they deny traditional collective seed ownership and preclude subsistence as a viable livelihood. Many internationally-oriented counter-responses work to r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brian C. Campbell, James R. Veteto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2015-12-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21118
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spelling doaj-d4c15c0f9d4f4312a32f2a3f85552be62020-11-25T00:13:22ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512015-12-0122144546510.2458/v22i1.2111820552Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US SouthBrian C. Campbell0James R. Veteto1Berry College, USAWestern Carolina University, USANeoliberal economic frameworks threaten the ability of marginalized people worldwide to grow, harvest, and access sufficient healthy food because they deny traditional collective seed ownership and preclude subsistence as a viable livelihood. Many internationally-oriented counter-responses work to reframe intellectual property law in favor of traditional farmers. In the United States, various grassroots agricultural biodiversity conservation projects designed to re-establish the control of open-pollinated seeds within communities have emerged with similar intent. This article situates and explores the role of open-pollinated seeds and agricultural biodiversity conservation strategies in local food sovereignty. The authors direct applied research projects that collaboratively document and disseminate open-pollinated seed varieties throughout the Southeastern United States with a specific focus on the Ozark Highlands and Appalachian Mountains. The research methods represent an activist anthropology—participant observation and ethnographic interviewing while collaboratively growing and sharing seed varieties with local farmers, gardeners, seed-savers, and activists—with the explicit purpose of forging more sustainable, integrated, and sovereign local food systems. Keywords: agricultural anthropology, agrobiodiversity, grassroots strategies, in situ conservation, seed savinghttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21118
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian C. Campbell
James R. Veteto
spellingShingle Brian C. Campbell
James R. Veteto
Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Brian C. Campbell
James R. Veteto
author_sort Brian C. Campbell
title Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
title_short Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
title_full Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
title_fullStr Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
title_full_unstemmed Free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the US South
title_sort free seeds and food sovereignty: anthropology and grassroots agrobiodiversity conservation strategies in the us south
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Neoliberal economic frameworks threaten the ability of marginalized people worldwide to grow, harvest, and access sufficient healthy food because they deny traditional collective seed ownership and preclude subsistence as a viable livelihood. Many internationally-oriented counter-responses work to reframe intellectual property law in favor of traditional farmers. In the United States, various grassroots agricultural biodiversity conservation projects designed to re-establish the control of open-pollinated seeds within communities have emerged with similar intent. This article situates and explores the role of open-pollinated seeds and agricultural biodiversity conservation strategies in local food sovereignty. The authors direct applied research projects that collaboratively document and disseminate open-pollinated seed varieties throughout the Southeastern United States with a specific focus on the Ozark Highlands and Appalachian Mountains. The research methods represent an activist anthropology—participant observation and ethnographic interviewing while collaboratively growing and sharing seed varieties with local farmers, gardeners, seed-savers, and activists—with the explicit purpose of forging more sustainable, integrated, and sovereign local food systems. Keywords: agricultural anthropology, agrobiodiversity, grassroots strategies, in situ conservation, seed saving
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21118
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