Thresholds of resistance: agroecology, resilience and the agrarian question
Eric Holt-Giménez, Annie Shattuck, Ilja van Lammeren
Abstract
A growing body of literature supports agroecology as a pathway to climate resilience – a claim steadily being adopted by development institutions. However, agroecology's agrarian limitations are often overlooked. Politically contested understandings of resilience introduce further confusion. Agroecological claims of superior climate resiliency cannot be understood in isolation from the socially unsustainable conditions of many smallholders, especially women. Reviewing agroecological resilience at different scales, we find that the theoretical approach to resilience in development discourse poorly accounts for agrarian vulnerability/resilience. We revisit the birthplace of the Campesino a Campesino movement in Guatemala where resilience intersects with agroecology and longstanding agrarian demands.