Our food system is global. For some, this arrangement ensures access to healthy food from nearly every part of the planet. But many others inhabit a world of violent displacement, brutal working conditions, and starvation, one in which the very people who grow the world’s food cannot feed their families. What would it take to build a just food system? To answer this question, we will study the many efforts—from organic certification and cooperatives to land occupations and food sovereignty movements—to transform the production, circulation, and consumption of food. We will explore how these struggles illuminate the social and ecological problems created by our current food system, and how we might create something better.

Prerequisites: Upper-division standing.

4

Units

Optional

Grading

1

Passtime

Upper division only

Level Limit

Letters and science

College
These majors only globl
KOHLBRY P
No info found
GLOBL 110
0 / 90 Enrolled
Global Culture and Ethics
Altman J D
M W
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
GLOBL 123
0 / 45 Enrolled
Introduction to International Political Economy
Jan Nederveen-Pieterse 2.1
M W
14:00 PM - 15:15 PM
GLOBL 126
0 / 45 Enrolled
Global Borders
Ramirez-Lopez
T R
14:00 PM - 15:15 PM
GLOBL 130
0 / 90 Enrolled
Global Economy and Development
Kohlbry P
T R
14:00 PM - 15:15 PM
GLOBL 131
0 / 45 Enrolled
Land Uprisings and Emancipatory Alternatives
Ricado Jacobs 3.4
T R
12:30 PM - 13:45 PM
GLOBL 140
0 / 75 Enrolled
Global Racial Justice
Ramirez-Lopez
T R
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM