Racial Equity Challenge Planning Team Meeting
OnlinePlanning Team members only. Please contact FSNE with questions.
Thank you for visiting this events page. Please submit food system events so that we can include them in this listing.
Planning Team members only. Please contact FSNE with questions.
For BIPOC, this series creates space for healing from white supremacy culture and transforming anti-Blackness within ourselves, toward healing our webs of relationships, organizations and societal structures. In this series participants will practice a creative combination of healing practices ranging from embodied awareness to movement, reflection and writing. Join this series to rediscover, relearn, and reimagine in our current crisis-driven reality.
You are invited to the first session in FSNE's month-long 2022 Winter Series, organized around our four impact areas. Please register and join for part of all of this session.
The first part of this event will feature an interactive panel of inspiring guests (10:00 am to noon EST). The afternoon will take the form of a skill-building workshop (on network weaving and network mapping) to build on our themes for the day (12:30 to 2:30 pm EST). The workshop portion will deepen our focus on harnessing the power of collaborative networks in creating more just, sustainable, and democratic food systems.
Registration is open. You will get the most out of this session if you are able to spend some time with these "pre-work" readings.
Food systems management takes place in diverse sectors and at different scales. This can include: kitchen management by culinary professionals and chefs; management of food businesses, cooperatives, and organizations; farm management; and labor management – whether worker-led or proprietor-driven. Meanwhile, food justice – as a movement, concept, and field of academic scholarship – insists that inequities in the food system are grounded in social structures such as structural racism, gender-based disparities, and intergenerational wealth and economic inequalities. There are many ways in which a food justice approach is important to supporting socially just and sustainable food systems management, touching upon diverse, but interconnected issues including wage disparity, uneven enforcement of regulations, and inequitable access to start-up capital for sustainable food businesses.
This panel discussion explores these themes from the perspectives of food entrepreneurs, innovators, and leaders in non-profit, government, and business sectors. Panelist comments will be followed by audience questions and participatory discussion.
What if we owned it? In this Remaking the Economy webinar, leaders in the movement for Black food sovereignty will discuss how that movement is being built, rooted in the gifts and talents from within the Black community, and anchored in a community vision. Our panelists are:
Darnell Adams is a worker-owner of the Boston-based Firebrand Consulting Cooperative, which provides consulting support to nonprofit, for-profit, and cooperative business—and a member of the Food Co-op Initiative board.
Dr. Jasmine Ratliff, based in New Orleans, is co-executive director of the National Black Food and Justice Alliance, a coalition of Black-led groups that builds Black leadership and institutions for food sovereignty and liberation.
Malik Yakini is cofounder and executive director of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network (DBCFSN), which manages a 7-acre D-Town Farm, and is a board member of the Detroit People’s Food Co-op.
The first part of this event (10:00 am to noon) will feature Dr. Eddie Moore, Jr. and Debby Irving, inspiration for FSNE's version of the Racial Equity Challenge.
The second half of this event (12:30 to 2:30 pm) will be a training/workshop with special guests Katya Fels Smith and Tanya Tucker from the Full Frame Initiative in which you'll gain valuable insights for your own work. Full guest details coming soon!
As we grapple with pandemic disruptions and political polarization, reckon with emboldened white supremacy, and face ever-growing challenges from the climate crisis, the importance of standing firm in a commitment to racial equity and justice in our food system is growing.
What does racial equity look like in our communities and institutions?
How can we advance multi-racial movements for justice and wellbeing?
What are some of the opportunities we can lean into now?
Planning Team members only. Please contact FSNE with questions.
As you advance new approaches to end hunger, how are you hearing from and engaging with the people you serve? Measuring more than pounds of food can involve developing new qualitative tools in your work. Learn about ways to gather feedback and stories through qualitative data collection and ideas for how to use and share the information. People who experience food insecurity are experts in their challenges with accessing food and can help us improve our services and inform us of the work we do. This webinar will highlight strategies and examples for gathering qualitative data.
Visionary Policy - Universal Human Rights Legislation in Support of Food & Forest Systems
Details and registration coming soon!
What is “network” for social change? Why do we at Beatufiul Ventures identify as a “Network”? In the 21st century, organizations are reaching their limits of effectiveness. The challenges we face as Black people can no longer be solved by larger and more sophisticated organizations. Networks, webs of connected individuals and organizations, are perfectly suited to address the sticky, complex problems and meet the opportunities of our times. As a collective of Black creatives and change makers, we will explore the concepts and practices of thinking and moving like a network from a Black liberation perspective.
Dr. Julian Agyeman, Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, and Fletcher Professor of Rhetoric and Debate at Tufts University, is one of the leading thinkers in environmental justice and food justice. In this talk, Julian will outline the concept of just sustainabilities as a response to the ‘equity deficit’ of much sustainability thinking and practice. He will explore his contention that who can belong in our cities will ultimately determine what our cities can become. He will illustrate his ideas with examples from urban planning and design, the ‘Minneapolis Paradox’ and food justice.
This keynote presentation and Q&A will be moderated by Dr. Kristin Reynolds, Chair of Food Studies in the Bachelor’s Program for Adults and Transfer Students within the Schools of Public Engagement.
Presented by the the Food Studies in the Bachelor’s Program for Adults and Transfer Students, the Environmental Studies and Urban Studies programs in the Global-Urban-Environmental Studies Program (GLUE) within the Schools of Public Engagement, and the university-wide Tishman Environment and Design Center.
Join CT Food System Alliance for our first winter gathering! What do you need and want out of a food system network? A network’s structure only works if it fits the needs of its members. Representatives from the new steering committee of the CT Farm to School Collaborative will briefly share their network structures to offer some inspiration. This session will provide a space to have open discussions about what YOU want in a network and how CFSA can support those needs
Please join us for the fourth and final event in FSNE's 2022 Winter Series, bringing regional food system participants and aligned friends together to dig into our shared work, learn together, get inspired, and deepen our connections to one another. Please come for part of all of this event.
Registration is now open.
In addition to strengthening our regional network, centering racial equity, and embedding our shared values into the regional policy landscape, FSNE knows that employing strategic narrative and framing wisdom is a critical part of the culture change we need in order to transform our food system. Without shifting the way our region thinks about food and related systems, we will continue to struggle to shift actions and behaviors that are desperately needed now.
Planning Team members only. Please contact FSNE with questions.
Monthly meeting of FSNE's current Network Team. Contact FSNE with questions.
The 2022 Local Food Trade Show of New England is a dynamic virtual space for local food producers and buyers from across our region to connect. Through sales meetings, networking events, and technical support, this event provides food entrepreneurs with opportunities to expand their enterprise, while giving buyers access to the most promising new products. Register today!
Join us for an unforgettable virtual evening event: Roots, Resistance, and Reclamation. Roots: How are Black women embracing the roots of African Diasporic food systems, culture, and practices? Resistance: How are Black women resisting the current food system through AI? Reclamation: How are Black women reclaiming food and land? Confirmed Speakers: Mary Schmidt Campbell is
The FSNE Racial Equity Challenge returns in April 2022.
Food Solutions New England will host its 8th version of the 21-Day Racial Equity Habit-Building Challenge from April 4th to the 24th in 2022.
This virtual event aims to celebrate the skills and experiences of disabled cooks, while also cultivating an understanding of how ableism and adaptability function in food spaces. This event is the first of a two-part event series, entitled "RECIPES FOR ACCESSIBILITY," devoted to the intersection of food and disability.
We invite all participants of this year's FSNE 21-Day Racial Equity Habit-Building Challenge to join with others for a facilitated conversation about the topics and learnings from the week.
You are encouraged to join, even if you did not get a chance to get to all the "daily email prompts" for the week. You will get a chance to meet others from different places and with different perspectives on the material in a supportive environment in order to deepen your learning and understanding about equity in our food system.
No charge, but registration is required. The session will not be recorded.
What does meat mean to you? This symposium brings together a range of actors from different disciplines and practices to promote dialog, share insights, and gain new perspectives on this question. Why meat? Animals raised for human consumption are at the center of discussions on how to create a more sustainable, just, and resilient food system. Our relationships to meat raise big questions about how to address climate change, whether meat can be part of a sustainable diet, and what it means to practice our values. Because there are multiple ways of knowing and engaging the topic of meat, this symposium will convene diverse individuals and groups, from scientists and entrepreneurs designing alternative proteins to artists and researchers creating visual and ethnographic representations of industrial meat production.
Join the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Local Catch Network for a virtual forum that will bring together stakeholders from across the seafood sector who are working to strengthen local and regional seafood systems.
The USDA LAMP Grant Forum will provide opportunities for past grantees and prospective applicants to connect, and share learned experiences to better understand, develop and implement successful Farmers Market Promotion Program, Local Food Promotion Program, and Regional Food Systems Partnerships program projects. The Forum will offer support to current and prospective grantees by facilitating knowledge sharing and network building between and among attendees, panelists, and USDA Grants Management Specialists. For more information, please visit the Local Catch Network website.
Monthly meeting of FSNE's current Network Team. Contact FSNE with questions.
In "Everybody Eats: Communication and the Paths to Food Justice" Marianne LeGreco and Niesha Douglas tell the story of food justice in Greensboro, NC beginning when the city reached the top of the Food Research and Action Center's list of major cities experiencing food hardship.
Greensboro's local food communities chose to act by engaging neighborhood voices, mobilizing creative resources, and sustaining conversations across the local food system. Within three years, Greensboro saw an 8% drop in its food hardship rate and moved from first to fourteenth in FRAC's list.
Thank you for visiting this events page. Please submit food system events so that we can include them in this listing.