A Geographical political ecology of Eastern European food systems

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Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Knygos dalis / Part of the book
Language:
Anglų kalba / English
Title:
A Geographical political ecology of Eastern European food systems
In the Book:
Politics and the environment in Eastern Europe / edited by Eszter Krasznai Kovács. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2021. P. 235-260
Summary / Abstract:

LTReikšminiai žodžiai: Maisto sistemos; Žemdirbystė; Kaimo vystymasis; Žuvininkystė; Klasikinė žemdirbystė. Keywords: Food systems; Agriculture; Rural Development; Fisheries; Classic Agrarian.Reikšminiai žodžiai: Politinė ekologija; Maisto tiekimo grandinė; Žemės ūkis; Political ecology; Food supply chain; Agriculture.

ENThis chapter uses a geographical political ecology of food systems approach to question this kind of developmentalist thinking, which positions the ‘East’ as inferior to and needing to learn from the ‘West.’ It starts with an overview of the agrarian question from the early-twentieth century, wherein eastern Europe figured prominently as a locus of theoretical debate and development. The next section shows how analyses written in and on eastern Europe produced generative scholarly insights globally as academic debates were launched about agrarian change and peasant studies with the decline of the European colonies in the twentieth century. Many scholars working in this tradition, which came to be called agrarian political economy, aligned themselves with neo-Leninist Marxism (Bernstein, 2010). As Marxian approaches faced increased critique towards the end of the twentieth century, new theoretical perspectives gained prominence (Buttel, 2001), but the declining influence of Marxism brought about a similar decline in understandings of capitalism in the food system. The end of the section therefore argues for a renewed agrarian political economy approach as part of a broader geographical political ecology of food systems. Building on these insights, the penultimate section takes inspiration from early work on the agrarian question and outlines how a geographical political ecology of food systems in eastern Europe could contribute to broader debates in agrarian and food studies, but also shape geographies of hope, contestation and responsibility in the region.First, it demonstrates the significance of understanding the food system within the context of a ‘more-than-capitalist’ world. Second, it shows how a geographical political ecology of food systems approach helps explain key developments in food systems in the region. Third, it highlights how scholarly interventions in CEE are pushing theories in agri-food systems in new directions. A geographical political ecology of food systems approach offers the intellectual space for this kind of theoretical development. [Extract, p. 235-236]

DOI:
10.11647/OBP.0244.10
ISBN:
9781800641341
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https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/94698
Updated:
2022-08-29 07:22:11
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