This Handbook provides the first comprehensive review and synthesis of
knowledge and new thinking on how food and food systems can be thought,
interpreted and practiced around the old/new paradigms of commons and
commoning. The overall aim is to investigate the multiple constraints
that occur within and sustain the dominant food and nutrition regime and
to explore how it can change when different elements of the current food
systems are explored and re-imagined from a commons perspective.
The book sparks the debate on food as a commons between and within
disciplines, with particular attention to spaces of resistance (food
sovereignty, de-growth, open knowledge, transition town, occupations,
bottom-up social innovations) and organizational scales (local food,
national policies, South-South collaborations, international governance
and multi-national agreements). Overall, it shows the consequences of a
shift to the alternative paradigm of food as a commons in terms of food,
the planet and living beings.
Chapters 1 and 24 of this book are freely available as downloadable Open
Access PDFs at http: //www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.