Litcius/Paper detail

Democratising food: The case for a deliberative approach

Merisa S. Thompson, Alasdair Cochrane, Justa Hopma

2020Review of International Studies36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Prevailing political and ethical approaches that have been used to both critique and propose alternatives to the existing food system are lacking. Although food security, food sovereignty, food justice, and food democracy all offer something important to our reflection on the global food system, none is adequate as an alternative to the status quo. This article analyses each in order to identify the prerequisites for such an alternative approach to food governance. These include a focus on goods like nutrition and health, equitable distribution, supporting livelihoods, environmental sustainability, and social justice. However, other goods, like the interests of non-human animals, are not presently represented. Moreover, incorporating all of these goods is incredibly demanding, and some are in tension. This raises the question of how each can be appropriately accommodated and balanced. The article proposes that this ought to be done through deliberative democratic processes that incorporate the interests of all relevant parties at the local, national, regional, and global levels. In other words, the article calls for a deliberative approach to the democratisation of food. It also proposes that one promising potential for incorporating the interests of all affected parties and addressing power imbalances lies in organising the scope and remit of deliberation around food type.

Topics & Concepts

DeliberationPolitical scienceFood sovereigntyFood securityDeliberative democracyScope (computer science)Food systemsSustainabilityStatus quoEconomic JusticeDemocracyPoliticsEnvironmental ethicsLaw and economicsSociologyLawEcologyProgramming languageComputer scienceAgricultureBiologyPhilosophyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentReligion, Ecology, and EthicsEnvironmental Philosophy and Ethics