Introduction -- Chapter 1: Food Justice Needs a Just World: Confronting Structural Violence Against Land, Humans, and Nonhuman Animals -- Chapter 2: Capitalist Dreams and Nightmares: Food Systems, the Animal-Industrial Complex, and Climate Disruption -- Chapter 3: Working in Hell: Labor in the Industrial Production of Animals as Food -- Chapter 4: What If We Really Are What We Eat?: Challenging a Colonial-Capitalist Diet -- Chapter 5: The Upside Down: The Hidden World of Nonhuman Animals as Food -- Chapter 6: Towards a Compassionate Food System. Food in a Just World examines the violence, social breakdown, and environmental consequences of our global system of food production, distribution, and consumption. From animals in industrialized farming - but also those reared in supposedly higher-welfare practices - to low-wage essential workers, and from populations being marketed unhealthy diets to the natural ecosystems suffering daily degradation, each step of the process is built on some form of exploitation. While highlighting the broken system's continuities from European colonialism to contemporary globalization, the authors argue that the seeds of resilience, resistance, and inclusive manifestations of cultural resurgence are already being reflected in the day-to-day actions taking place in communities around the world. Emphasizing the need for urgent change, the book looks at how genuine democracy would give individuals and communities meaningful control over the decisions that impact their lives when seeking to secure this most basic human need humanely. Drawing on the perspectives of advocates, activists, workers, researchers and policy makers, Harris and Gibbs explore the politics of food in the context of capitalist globalization and the climate crisis, uncovering the complexities in our relationships with one another, with other animals, and with the natural world. --from publisher's website.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.