在加速生态变化的时代“拯救”植物遗传资源(和我们自己)

IF 1.3 Q3 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY
Megan Styles, Brandi Janssen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期的文章考察了农民、科学家和公民在人类导致的环境加速退化中,用来“拯救”对我们重要的东西(我们的种子、我们的身体、我们的农场和我们的社区)的策略。他们调查了这些行动者想象未来的方式——他们寻求保护他们认为至关重要的东西的方式,防止他们认为不可接受的东西的方式,以及(有时)向他们认为不可避免的东西屈服的方式。作者细致地记录了这些参与者在保存种子、培育花园、确保农场成功方面的投入,并记录了在不确定的未来维持(或复活)这些事情所必需的信息。我们首先提出一个特刊的四篇文章,提供深入了解种子银行的世界,这已成为人类世保存植物遗传资源的主要策略。两位作者带我们走进几个主要的机构,这些机构在为银行收集和准备种子方面发挥了作用,探索它们在历史上是如何发展的,它们在今天是如何运作的,以及谁在照顾这些种子并决定它们未来的用途方面发挥了作用。总之,这些收藏品帮助我们理解了政治经济的阴谋,日常劳动,以及想象中的种子保存的未来。在本期中,Janette Bulkan细致地概述了苦木薯在圭亚那两个原住民的社会组织和信仰体系中的地位。利用历史资源和她自己的人种学研究,Bulkan解释了尽管有加工面粉和白米,木薯如何以及为什么仍然是圭亚那土著饮食和文化习俗的核心。她特别关注妇女在种植木薯以及保护和传播特定品种知识方面的作用。她还探讨了木薯在阿鲁雅信仰体系中的作用。在《超越替代食物网络:了解巴勒莫城市绿化的动机》一书中,Giuseppina Migliore、Pietro Romeo、Riccardo Testa和Giorgio Schifani研究了为什么巴勒莫(西西里岛最大的城市)的居民选择参与城市园艺。虽然之前的研究主要集中在参与城市花园的政治动机上,但作者发现,参与这些花园的公民主要关心的是吃安全的食物。许多人买不起有机食品;所以他们选择自己种植。作者将他们的工作框架在对orti urbani历史的有趣阅读中,并认为巴勒莫应该为这些花园分配更多的绿色空间。托马斯·l·亨肖(Thomas L. Henshaw)在《“新鲜准备”食品服务提供商的出现是对当地食品的入侵吗?》亨肖考虑了食品服务公司的紧急战略,特别是那些强调“新鲜”产品的公司。从理论上讲,强调新鲜产品应该有助于购买当地生产的产品,因此“更新鲜”的产品。然而,根据对五大湖地区八所文理学院员工的采访,他发现,对新鲜度的重视对改变食品服务的购买行为几乎没有影响。相反,食品服务管理人员应该做更多的工作来增加机构的意愿和目标,为当地采购制定目标,并与种植者签订有利的合同。最后,Andrea Rissing带我们去爱荷华州的“盈利能力”vs.“成功”:剥离初期农场财务的原因和后果,来思考一个成功的农场到底是什么样子的。根据对结束农业企业的爱荷华人、银行家和农业顾问的人种学研究,里辛展示了经济上的成功并不一定导致农业上的成功。相反,财务考虑与家庭关系、工作量和其他生活方式因素交织在一起,构成了个人对农业“成功”的理想。她的结论是,尽管农场财务顾问希望以货币目标为中心,但农场财务健康状况需要在社会背景下考虑,以更真实地衡量和预测成功。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Saving” Plant Genetic Resources (& Ourselves) in a Time of Accelerating Ecological Change

The articles in this issue examine the strategies that farmers, scientists, and citizens use to “save” the things that matter to us (our seeds, our bodies, our farms, and our communities) in the midst of accelerating, human-induced environmental degradation. They investigate the ways that these actors imagine the future—the ways that they seek to preserve what they see as vital, prevent what they see as unacceptable, and (sometimes) give in to what they see as unavoidable. The authors meticulously document the care that these actors invest in saving seeds, cultivating gardens, ensuring farm success, and documenting the information necessary for these things to be sustained (or resurrected) in an uncertain future.

We begin by presenting a special issue of four articles that provide insight into the world of seed banking, which has become a major strategy for preserving plant genetic resources in the Anthropocene. The authors take us inside a few of the major institutions that play a role in collecting and preparing seeds for banking, exploring how they developed historically, how they function today, and who plays a role in caring for these seeds and determining their future use. Together, this collection helps us understand the political-economic machinations, the everyday labor, and the imagined futures involved in seed saving.

Also in this issue, Janette Bulkan provides a meticulous overview of The Place of Bitter Cassava in the Social Organization and Belief Systems of Two Indigenous Peoples of Guyana. Drawing on historical resources and her own ethnographic research, Bulkan explains how and why cassava remains central to indigenous diets and cultural practices in Guyana, despite the availability of processed wheat flour and white rice. She pays particular attention to the role of women in cultivating cassava and protecting and disseminating knowledge about particular cultivars. She also explores the role of cassava in the areruya belief system.

In Beyond Alternative Food Networks: Understanding Motivations to Participate in Orti Urbani in Palermo, Giuseppina Migliore, Pietro Romeo, Riccardo Testa, and Giorgio Schifani examine why residents of Palermo (the largest city in Sicily) choose to participate in urban gardening. While previous studies have focused on political motivations for involvement with orti urbani, the authors found citizens involved in these gardens were primarily concerned about eating safe food. Many cannot afford to buy organic foods; so they choose to grow their own. The authors frame their work within an interesting reading of the history of orti urbani and argue that Palermo should allocate more green space to these gardens.

Thomas L. Henshaw considers collegiate food service systems in Is the Emergence of the “Fresh Prep” Food Service Provider an Entrée into Local Foods? Henshaw considers emergent strategies of food service firms, especially those who emphasize “fresh” products. Theoretically, the emphasis on fresh products should facilitate the purchase of locally produced, and therefore “fresher,” products. However, based on interviews with staff at eight liberal arts colleges in the Great Lakes region, he finds that the emphasis on freshness does little to change food service purchasing. Instead, food service managers should do more to increase institutional will and goals for local procurement, develop goals for purchasing, and enter into favorable contracts with growers.

Finally, Andrea Rissing takes us to Iowa in “Profitability” vs. “Making It:” Causes and Consequences of Disembedding Beginning Farms’ Finances to consider what a successful farm really looks like. Based on ethnographic work with Iowans who have ended their farming enterprises, as well as bankers and farm consultants, Rissing shows how financial success does not necessarily lead to farming success. Instead, financial considerations intersect with family relationships, workload, and other lifestyle factors to constitute individuals’ ideals of farming “success.” She concludes that, despite the desire of farm financial advisors to consider monetary goals as central, farm financial health needs to be considered within a social context to more truthfully measure, and predict, success.

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Culture Agriculture Food and Environment
Culture Agriculture Food and Environment AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY-
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