This document discusses theoretical approaches for understanding social food movements. It defines social food movements as civic collective actions focused on food and analyzes their different constituencies. It also presents typologies for categorizing these movements based on their structure, goals, and degree of transformation sought. Reformist movements seek incremental change within the existing system, while transformative movements more fundamentally question existing power balances and can be alter-hegemonic or counter-hegemonic in nature. The document draws on literature discussing these approaches and debates regarding social movements' potential to reform or transform current food systems.
1. Social Food
Movements
Theoretical approaches
to understand
constituencies & claims
JOSE LUIS VIVERO POL
University of Louvain
PhD Research Fellow
in Food Governance
“Social Food Movements”
Master in Food, Law & Finance
International University College,
Turin, Italy (March, 2017)
9. Multi-level Perspective on socio-technological transitions Geels (2002)
Lock-in
Mechanisms
Hard to
change
Niche innovations: learning, networking,
appealing vision, scaling up
Internal Coherence
Basics taken for granted,
media & science building
consent
10. Accepted Paradigms (social
constructs), Utopia is discarded
Hegemonic Discourse (based on
values, ideology, science)
Manufacture of Consent
Policies & Laws follow discourse
Alternative Discourses
(values, praxis, discontent)
Challenging the system:
adoption, co-option,
replacement
11. Typologies by
structure
• Legally-formed CSO (NGOs, Federation)
• Self-regulated Civic Actions (Food
Buying Groups, Guerrila Gardening)
• Networks of Peers (Wikipedia)
• Customary or Contemporary
12. • Holt-Gimenez & Shattuck (2011)
• Geels et al. (2015)
• Williams (1977)
• Wright (2006)
• McClintock (2014)
Vivero-Pol, J.L. Food as Commons or Commodity? Exploring the Links between
Normative Valuations and Agency in Food Transition. Sustainability 2017, 9, 442.
13. Typologies by Goal/Purpose
REFORMISTS
Incremental changes, no
questioning balance of power
Neoliberal Corporative
reproducing neoliberal regime,
market is best allocation
mechanism, property & profits R
foundational pillars
Gradual Reformers:
fault-lines recognized, mitigate
social & environmental
externalities
TRANSFORMATIVE
Questioning balance of power,
pluralistic (strength & weakness)
Alter-hegemonic (interstitital)
Changing by doing: pragmatic
Remains within current regime and
dominant market narrative
Counter-hegemonic (Ruptural)
Normative, confrontational
Structural reforms, questioning
foundations of current inequalities,
man-made inequalities
14. Neoliberal Reformists
• Daily life practices, behaviour,
programmes BUT maintains status quo
• Sovereign consumer shall eat less ultra-
processed food and meat, but they keep
selling those products (influencing
through publicity)
• Hunger and obesity have no man-made
drivers, no guilty corporations. They just
happen
18. Gradual Reformers
• Business as usual is not an option. They
recognize fault-lines of industrial food system
• But changes R neither radical nor affecting
core elements of that very system
• Food waste, produce more with less
resources, increase safety nets, nourish better
with market products
19.
20.
21. 3 PARADOXES (NO responsible actors): food waste,
malnutrition-obesity, distortion of resource use
25. Alter-hegemonic Transformative
• Incremental erosion of structures through
different praxis. More doing than protesting.
• Not so demanding: each one at his pace, no
political engagement required, keeping our
livelihoods but changing some habits
• Interstices (Food Policy Councils) and edges
(Urban gardens in abandoned lots)
• Remain within capitalistic narratives. Better
markets, more governmental control
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31. Counter-hegemonic Transformative
• Clash of narratives seeking hegemony in the
world of ideas. First ideas, then policies & legal
frameworks
• Social struggles, do not refuse conflict bcs it
facilitates disjunctures & changes
• Complete over haul of status quo, utopian,
moral-based, giving voice to neglected groups
• Extremely political. Highly Normative (strength &
weakness). Demanding compromise
• Food producers, rural peasants, indigenous
groups
38. You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change
something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete
R Buckminster Fuller, architect
The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping
from old ones John Maynard Keynes
Our basic function was to develop alternatives to existing policies, to
keep them alive and available until the political impossible becomes
the politically inevitable”
Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom
An old error is always more popular than a new truth
German Proverb
It is from the champions of the impossible rather than the slaves of
the possible that evolution draws its creative force
Barbara Wootton, British Sociologist
39. Geels, F. W., A. McMeekin, J. Mylan & D. Southerton (2015). A critical appraisal of Sustainable
Consumption and Production research: The reformist, revolutionary and reconfiguration positions.
Global Environmental Change 34: 1–12.
Geels, F.W. & J. Schot (2007). Typology of sociotechnical transition pathways. Research Policy 36:
399-417.
Holt-Giménez, E. & A. Shattuck (2011). Food crises, food regimes and food movements: rumblings
of reform or tides of transformation? Journal of Peasant Studies 38(1): 109-144
McClintock, N. (2014). Radical, reformist, and garden-variety neoliberal: coming to terms with
urban agriculture's contradictions. Local Environment 19(2): 147-171
Williams, R. (1977). Marxism and Literature. Oxford University Press: Oxford
Wright, E. O. (2006) Compass Points. Towards a Socialist Alternative. New Left Review 41: 93–124.
References