Abstract

Food justice represents an evolving framework that puts social justice at the center of debates on how to achieve sustainable food systems. Food justice has largely been examined in community-level projects and activism outside the UK. This paper uses food justice as a framework through which to analyze food policy discourse in the UK. Our analysis presents an approach to “reading for social justice” by using the twin pillars of “distributive” (how benefits and risks are shared) and “procedural” justice (who is included) as analytical lenses. We apply critical discourse analysis to 20 policy documents published since the 2016 “Brexit” referendum. Our analysis finds that elements of both distributive and procedural justice are present, but underdeveloped or ignored across the documents. The lack of direct attention to social justice issues in the papers was not for lack of actual social justice issues, which were implicit within the discourse. The post-Brexit discourse reproduced existing power imbalances and despite occurring at a juncture where the potential for change was high, marginalized and vulnerable voices remain underrepresented. In the context of post-Brexit Britain, as well as in any political context, we argue that if food policy-making and governance are to enable a more just and sustainable food system, a more systematic approach to incorporating social justice needs to be developed. To this end, we offer a five-part approach to “reading for social justice” when scrutinizing food and farming policy. See the press release for this article.&nbsp

Highlights

  • There is growing concern over the place of food, agriculture, and food systems in society

  • How can we address the negative impacts of industrialized agriculture on the environment and health? How can changes in agriculture and food systems help cool the planet? And how can all this be done while addressing worsening social injustices that contribute to food insecurity and diet-related health inequalities affecting millions of people (Gottlieb & Joshi, 2010; Holt-Giménez & Shattuck, 2011)? Research and activism for more sustainable and socially just food systems have continually evolved, leading to many important practical and theoretical advances (Alkon & Agyeman, 2011)

  • We focus on whether social justice has been reflected in recent debates on British food and farming policy, which have been stimulated by the United Kingdom’s (UK) referendum on whether to withdraw from the European Union

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing concern over the place of food, agriculture, and food systems in society. Brexit will have significant implications for the UK’s food system, not least because it will mean the withdrawal of the UK from the Common Agricultural Policy, which has determined agriculture and rural development policy since 1973. While this rupture could be seen as an opportunity to advance more just and sustainable policies, it could exacerbate existing problems in the food system related to environmental, economic, cultural, and social issues (Lang, Millstone, & Marsden, 2017)

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