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What grows from a pandemic? Toward an abolitionist agroecology

Maywa Montenegro de Wit

2020The Journal of Peasant Studies74 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

COVID-19 has exposed racialized vulnerabilities in the dominant agrifood system and granted opportunities to build anew. In this paper, I explore a series of breakdowns, from pandemic ecologies to uncontrolled infection among meatpacking workers. Agroecology has the potential to heal manifold metabolic rifts through which these problems arise. Ecologically, it offers biodiversity-based agriculture to maintain landscape complexity and buffer viral spillovers. Socially, intentional work is needed to center racism in the original accumulations through which metabolic rifts emerge. Specifically, agroecologists can mobilize lessons from abolition, a strategy premised on dismantling exploitative systems through growing relationships and institutions that affirm life.

Topics & Concepts

AgroecologyPandemicWork (physics)Environmental sociologyPolitical sciencePolitical economyAgricultureCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)GlobalizationSociologyEnvironmental ethicsDevelopment economicsEconomicsSocial scienceEcologyBiologyLawMedicineDiseasePhilosophyPathologyEngineeringInfectious disease (medical specialty)Mechanical engineeringAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentOrganic Food and AgricultureUrban Agriculture and Sustainability
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