
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Kirsten Larsen is co-founder with partner Serenity Hill of the Open Food Network. It’s a not-for-profit, global collaboration building food distribution systems that are fair, local and transparent. The Network’s flagship open source platform had been successfully enabling ethical food distribution in multiple countries. Now, in the wake of COVID-19, it has gone to a whole new level, as producers look for alternative ways to sell quality produce, and eaters look for alternative ways to access it.
The Network reports a tenfold increase in people signing up to the platform, and a tenfold increase in turnover. This grass roots initiative now spans 13 countries, and continues to grow. As the greeting on the Open Food Network website puts it: Food Unincorporated - sometimes the best way to fix the system is to start a new one.
Kirsten is a farmer herself, and an Honorary Fellow at the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, at the University of Melbourne. She sees her work as focused on the complex challenges of sustainability and resilient food systems, and on the design and implementation of responses that also support healthy communities and regional economic development.
Kirsten was kind enough to join me online from her home in Violet Town, Victoria, Australia.
Title slide: from the Shepparton News (pic: Megan Fisher).
Recorded on Friday 12 June 2020.
Music:
The System, by the Public Opinion Afro Orchestra.
Find more:
Open Food Network.
Moving Feast.
The international award the Network won.
Send us a text
Support the show
The RegenNarration podcast is independent, ad-free and freely available, thanks to the generous support of listeners like you. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them.
BECOME A PAID SUBSCRIBER to connect with your host, other listeners and exclusive benefits, on:
Or DONATE:
You can also:
Thanks for your support!
5
88 ratings
Kirsten Larsen is co-founder with partner Serenity Hill of the Open Food Network. It’s a not-for-profit, global collaboration building food distribution systems that are fair, local and transparent. The Network’s flagship open source platform had been successfully enabling ethical food distribution in multiple countries. Now, in the wake of COVID-19, it has gone to a whole new level, as producers look for alternative ways to sell quality produce, and eaters look for alternative ways to access it.
The Network reports a tenfold increase in people signing up to the platform, and a tenfold increase in turnover. This grass roots initiative now spans 13 countries, and continues to grow. As the greeting on the Open Food Network website puts it: Food Unincorporated - sometimes the best way to fix the system is to start a new one.
Kirsten is a farmer herself, and an Honorary Fellow at the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, at the University of Melbourne. She sees her work as focused on the complex challenges of sustainability and resilient food systems, and on the design and implementation of responses that also support healthy communities and regional economic development.
Kirsten was kind enough to join me online from her home in Violet Town, Victoria, Australia.
Title slide: from the Shepparton News (pic: Megan Fisher).
Recorded on Friday 12 June 2020.
Music:
The System, by the Public Opinion Afro Orchestra.
Find more:
Open Food Network.
Moving Feast.
The international award the Network won.
Send us a text
Support the show
The RegenNarration podcast is independent, ad-free and freely available, thanks to the generous support of listeners like you. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them.
BECOME A PAID SUBSCRIBER to connect with your host, other listeners and exclusive benefits, on:
Or DONATE:
You can also:
Thanks for your support!
849 Listeners
101 Listeners
14 Listeners
15 Listeners
424 Listeners
507 Listeners
390 Listeners
521 Listeners
125 Listeners
49 Listeners
99 Listeners
86 Listeners
73 Listeners
380 Listeners
63 Listeners