Abstract

The Inter-institutional Network for Food, Agriculture and Sustainability (INFAS or Network), initiated informally in 2008 and formalized in 2011, encompasses a broad group of practitioners, primarily in academic institutions, who work individually on a diverse range of topics in agricultural and food system sustainability. INFAS grew from a shared vision to expose the challenges facing the transformation of agriculture and our global food system, including the sometimes competing interests of labor, producers, and consumers in the food system. From the start, the Network was envisioned to include activists in collaboration with academics in order to broadly improve the economic, environmental, and social sustainability of the food system by spanning disciplinary and institutional boundaries, convening diverse stake-holders, and linking knowledge with action. We envision an environmentally sustainable and socially just U.S. food system. This requires that race, class, and gender no longer determine health outcomes, social status, or economic opportunity, and that healthy, restored agroecosystems and fisheries are achievable....

Highlights

  • INFAS grew from a shared vision to expose the challenges facing the transformation of agriculture and our global food system, including the sometimes competing interests of labor, producers, and consumers in the food system

  • The topic of “Labor in the Food System from Farm to Table” aligns with the Network’s mission and values, and we are honored to support this special issue of the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development (JAFSCD)

  • Patricia Allen, an INFAS participant, has contributed the issue overview editorial that reflects on labor in the food system, weaving in the key themes of the individual journal contributors

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Summary

Introduction

The topic of “Labor in the Food System from Farm to Table” aligns with the Network’s mission and values, and we are honored to support this special issue of the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development (JAFSCD). INFAS grew from a shared vision to expose the challenges facing the transformation of agriculture and our global food system, including the sometimes competing interests of labor, producers, and consumers in the food system.

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