1. Introduction: the emerging debates of food provisioning 2. A framework for analysing dynamics of food and agriculture in Colombia 3. The hidden battles of food provisioning: background to a central debate 4. A restless journey and the emergence of the food-provisioning debate 5. Agrarian negotiations 2014–2018 and the competing narratives of food and agriculture 6. Negotiating food sovereignty in Colombia 7. Broadening the conversation: food consumption and corporate food sector dynamics 8 Conclusions: what could be future pathways of food and agriculture in Colombia?
Felipe Roa-Clavijo is a researcher and Global Policy Lead for the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) at the University of Oxford, UK, and a visiting research fellow at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame, USA. In 2019, his doctoral thesis, on which this book is based, won the prestigious Colombian National Prize in the Social Sciences and Humanities category from the Alejandro Angel Escobar Foundation. Felipe has a PhD in International Development from the University of Oxford, a Master’s degree in Public Administration from Seattle University and an undergraduate degree in Ecology from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana.
"In the wake of the agricultural mobilizations of 2013 and
subsequent years, and the peace accord of 2016, Felipe
Roa-Clavijo’s book is a timely and important contribution to the
study of rural Colombia’s problems and potential. It widens the
focus beyond the more familiar questions of land tenure to include
the renewed debate around the dilemmas, political and economic, of
how Colombia should feed itself. Its relevance is far from being
exclusively Colombian."
Malcolm Deas, Emeritus Fellow of Latin American Politics, St.
Antony’s College. University of Oxford"We have known for a long
time that power relations lie in food choices as much as in
agricultural policies, but Roa-Clavijo’s carefully crafted account
renews our understanding of why agri-food systems with their
built-in provisioning mechanisms are so deeply political. Even more
importantly, Roa Clavijo’s study demonstrates that, in Colombia, a
focus on food provisioning (visions of how to feed whom and by what
means) has enabled actors to come together as a nation. Through
their negotiations, actors have worked at liberating politics from
decades of land violence. One can only hope that the current
commitment to inclusive politics of land, food and agriculture will
facilitate the emergence of resilient and thriving local
economies."
Laura M. Rival, Professor of Anthropology of Nature, Society and
Development. University of Oxford "This is a fascinating book. If
you want to learn about the complex intersections of the politics
of food provisioning, changes in agri-food systems and the role of
social movements you must read it. Based on detailed research in
Colombia, the book is an important contribution to debates in
agrarian studies and wider discussions around food politics and
competing pathways to sustainable development."
Ian Scoones, Professorial Fellow, STEPS Centre, the Institute of
Development Studies, University of Sussex"Lying at the heart of so
many other political, economic and environmental pressures,
arguably no challenge in the world is more important than equitable
and sustainable food provision. At the present critical juncture,
there is barely a country in the world where associated imperatives
are more acute, transformations more radical, or opportunities more
salient, than Colombia. Taking an interdisciplinary ‘agri-food
systems approach’, Felipe Roa-Clavijo offers an admirably clear,
comprehensive and authoritative analysis of the complex
intersecting issues. His focus at the end on the importance of
‘directionality’, ‘distribution’, ‘diversity’ and ‘democracy’,
offers a compelling agenda for action."
Andy Stirling, Professor of Science and Technology Policy at the
Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex"This is a
uniquely informed and engaging discussion of dynamics, past and
present, of food-provisioning in Colombia. Importantly, it
represents a significant contribution to understandings of the
national agrarian strike and the emergence of new agrarian
movements. A must read for anyone interested in imaging new
paradigms of food and agriculture in the context of changing
challenges and politics."
Jessica Duncan, Associate Professor in the Politics of Sustainable
Food Systems Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University
"In the wake of the agricultural mobilizations of 2013 and
subsequent years, and the peace accord of 2016, Felipe
Roa-Clavijo’s book is a timely and important contribution to the
study of rural Colombia’s problems and potential. It widens the
focus beyond the more familiar questions of land tenure to include
the renewed debate around the dilemmas, political and economic, of
how Colombia should feed itself. Its relevance is far from being
exclusively Colombian."
Malcolm Deas, Emeritus Fellow of Latin American Politics, St.
Antony’s College. University of Oxford"We have known for a long
time that power relations lie in food choices as much as in
agricultural policies, but Roa-Clavijo’s carefully crafted account
renews our understanding of why agri-food systems with their
built-in provisioning mechanisms are so deeply political. Even more
importantly, Roa-Clavijo’s study demonstrates that, in Colombia, a
focus on food provisioning (visions of how to feed whom and by what
means) has enabled actors to come together as a nation. Through
their negotiations, actors have worked at liberating politics from
decades of land violence. One can only hope that the current
commitment to inclusive politics of land, food and agriculture will
facilitate the emergence of resilient and thriving local
economies."
Laura M. Rival, Professor of Anthropology of Nature, Society and
Development. University of Oxford "This is a fascinating book. If
you want to learn about the complex intersections of the politics
of food provisioning, changes in agri-food systems and the role of
social movements you must read it. Based on detailed research in
Colombia, the book is an important contribution to debates in
agrarian studies and wider discussions around food politics and
competing pathways to sustainable development."
Ian Scoones, Professorial Fellow, STEPS Centre, the Institute of
Development Studies, University of Sussex"Lying at the heart of so
many other political, economic and environmental pressures,
arguably no challenge in the world is more important than equitable
and sustainable food provision. At the present critical juncture,
there is barely a country in the world where associated imperatives
are more acute, transformations more radical, or opportunities more
salient, than Colombia. Taking an interdisciplinary ‘agri-food
systems approach’, Felipe Roa-Clavijo offers an admirably clear,
comprehensive and authoritative analysis of the complex
intersecting issues. His focus at the end on the importance of
‘directionality’, ‘distribution’, ‘diversity’ and ‘democracy’,
offers a compelling agenda for action."
Andy Stirling, Professor of Science and Technology Policy at the
Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex"This is a
uniquely informed and engaging discussion of dynamics, past and
present, of food-provisioning in Colombia. Importantly, it
represents a significant contribution to understandings of the
national agrarian strike and the emergence of new agrarian
movements. A must read for anyone interested in imaging new
paradigms of food and agriculture in the context of changing
challenges and politics."
Jessica Duncan, Associate Professor in the Politics of Sustainable
Food Systems Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University
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