Beyond Policy: What Plants and Communities Can Teach us About Sustainable Changemaking

Lehua Ledbetter, Alexandria Neelis
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Abstract

In this community insight paper, we share conversations that took place over the course of two years that we believe shed light on the informal and less-recognized ways that humans forge trust as they design communication to help each other survive as communities in times of scarcity. We hope that this paper will legitimize the communication pathways and resource exchange that we believe make for a sustainable food system centered around abundance rather than deficit. In doing so, we also hope to start a greater conversation on how communities build trust and communication nimbly and quickly in times of crisis as policymaking often lags behind the needs of the community. As we saw during the COVID-19 food crisis, ad hoc communities fill the gaps that policymakers (such as the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)) can't when infrastructures fail. We take inspiration from the plants around us, farmers, scientists, community members, and the individuals and mutual aid groups that came together during the food crisis to build trust and dialogue as the first (and often most responsive) step towards sustainable food systems.
超越政策:植物和社区在可持续变革中的启示
在这篇社区洞察论文中,我们分享了两年来进行的对话,我们认为这些对话揭示了人类在设计交流方式以帮助彼此作为社区在匮乏时期生存时建立信任的非正式和鲜为人知的方式。我们希望这篇论文能使交流途径和资源交换合法化,我们相信这些途径和资源交换能使以丰裕而非匮乏为中心的可持续粮食系统得以实现。在此过程中,我们还希望就社区如何在危机时期灵活、快速地建立信任和沟通展开更广泛的讨论,因为政策制定往往落后于社区的需求。正如我们在 COVID-19 粮食危机中看到的那样,当基础设施出现故障时,临时社区可以填补决策者(如美国农业部)无法填补的空白。我们从身边的植物、农民、科学家、社区成员以及个人和互助团体中汲取灵感,他们在粮食危机期间走到一起,建立信任并开展对话,这是迈向可持续粮食系统的第一步(通常也是反应最迅速的一步)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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