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In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, guest producer Harrison Runtz talks with food systems experts Kelly Bronson, Irena Knezevic, and Carly Livingstone about how new digital technologies are changing the ways we grow and get food. They look at how big agri-businesses like John Deere create visions of a technological future of food, examine what Amazon’s entry into online food retailing has meant for small-scale and local food retailers, and argue for a more critical understanding about the impact of technological innovations on food systems. Together, they ask vital questions about who benefits and who doesn’t from new food technologies.
Contributors Guest-Producer & Host: Harrison Runtz Co-Producers & Hosts: Amanda Di Battista & Laine Young Sound Design, Research & Editing: Adedotun Babajide
Guests Kelly Bronson Carly Livingstone Irena Knezevic
Support & Funding Wilfrid Laurier University The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Carleton Food and Media Hub Balsillie School for International Affairs CIGI
Music Credits Keenan Reimer-Watts
Resources Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG Whose Land Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Farm Forward with John Deere Farm Hack AgBox Look twice at the digital agricultural revolution (Bronson and Knezevic)From Online Cart to Plate: What Amazon's Retail Domination Means for the Future of Food (Livingstone and Knezevic) Looking through a responsible innovation lens at uneven engagements with digital farming (Bronson)
See also the resources linked to the S1E6 episode of Handpicked, "We are all shepherds of the data": Food, tech and data sovereignty
Connect with Us: Email: [email protected] Twitter: @Handpickedpodc Facebook: Handpicked Podcast
Glossary of Terms
Big DataLarge quantities of data gathered by digital platforms, such as Amazon or Facebook, and other technologies, such as remote sensing, etc. Big data can be sorted and analyzed in different ways to uncover important insights for decision making. For instance, big data can be used to understand consumer purchasing practices to inform marketing spending and business practices to increase profit margins.
Data Mining Extracting patterns and key insights from big data sets, often using statistics and machine-learning technologies.
Data Sovereignty The right of people to have access to and power over the data and information associated with their lives, work, or communities.
Digitization The increasing use of digital technologies across sectors to make decisions and enable practices. Digital technologies include (but are not limited to), local and remote sensing technologies, digital platforms, big data, cloud-based solutions, etc.
Farming 4.0 Also referred to as digital farming, smart farming, or precision agriculture, this type of farming makes use of sensing technology and sophisticated computing technologies to make decisions about all aspects of the farm including crop choice, inputs, irrigation, and harvesting.
Food Policy Food policies are developed by governments at different scales to guide food-related decisions and actions. They inform and govern public, private, and non-profit sector actions related to improving food-related outcomes and can create opportunities for stakeholders to work together across sectors.
Food Security Food security is the ability to access safe, nutritious, culturally appropriate, and sufficient food all year round. A person or community is food insecure when people cannot afford or have limited or no access to the food they need to nourish their bodies. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization state that “food insecurity can affect diet quality in different ways, potentially leading to undernutrition as well as. . . obesity.” http://www.fao.org/publications/sofi/2020/en/
Food Sovereignty "Food Sovereignty is the right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems." https://viacampesina.org/en/
Open Source Data A legal protection that ensures that data that is owned and available for use to everyone in a particular community. In the case of Open Food Network, all users have access to all code associated with the platform but must make any alterations or new code available to all other users.
Platform Digital infrastructure or frameworks for different kinds of exchange. For example, Open Food Network is a platform that enables digital food hubs, shops, or farmers markets.
Producer A food enterprise which makes, grows, bakes, cooks, or produces food which it can supply to other businesses for sale. https://guide.openfoodnetwork.org/glossary-of-ofn-terms
Robotics The use of machines to perform tasks previously completed by waged workers. In agriculture, robotics include picking and milking machines, tractors and other farming machines, and packing machines, among other technologies.
Supply Chain All of the components of a system—including organizations, producers, suppliers, people, resources, activities, information, and infrastructures—that get a product to a consumer.
Sustainable Food System Food systems that are “socially just, support local economies; are ecologically regenerative, and foster citizen engagement.” https://fledgeresearch.ca/
Discussion Questions
In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, guest producer Harrison Runtz talks with food systems experts Kelly Bronson, Irena Knezevic, and Carly Livingstone about how new digital technologies are changing the ways we grow and get food. They look at how big agri-businesses like John Deere create visions of a technological future of food, examine what Amazon’s entry into online food retailing has meant for small-scale and local food retailers, and argue for a more critical understanding about the impact of technological innovations on food systems. Together, they ask vital questions about who benefits and who doesn’t from new food technologies.
Contributors Guest-Producer & Host: Harrison Runtz Co-Producers & Hosts: Amanda Di Battista & Laine Young Sound Design, Research & Editing: Adedotun Babajide
Guests Kelly Bronson Carly Livingstone Irena Knezevic
Support & Funding Wilfrid Laurier University The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Carleton Food and Media Hub Balsillie School for International Affairs CIGI
Music Credits Keenan Reimer-Watts
Resources Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG Whose Land Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Farm Forward with John Deere Farm Hack AgBox Look twice at the digital agricultural revolution (Bronson and Knezevic)From Online Cart to Plate: What Amazon's Retail Domination Means for the Future of Food (Livingstone and Knezevic) Looking through a responsible innovation lens at uneven engagements with digital farming (Bronson)
See also the resources linked to the S1E6 episode of Handpicked, "We are all shepherds of the data": Food, tech and data sovereignty
Connect with Us: Email: [email protected] Twitter: @Handpickedpodc Facebook: Handpicked Podcast
Glossary of Terms
Big DataLarge quantities of data gathered by digital platforms, such as Amazon or Facebook, and other technologies, such as remote sensing, etc. Big data can be sorted and analyzed in different ways to uncover important insights for decision making. For instance, big data can be used to understand consumer purchasing practices to inform marketing spending and business practices to increase profit margins.
Data Mining Extracting patterns and key insights from big data sets, often using statistics and machine-learning technologies.
Data Sovereignty The right of people to have access to and power over the data and information associated with their lives, work, or communities.
Digitization The increasing use of digital technologies across sectors to make decisions and enable practices. Digital technologies include (but are not limited to), local and remote sensing technologies, digital platforms, big data, cloud-based solutions, etc.
Farming 4.0 Also referred to as digital farming, smart farming, or precision agriculture, this type of farming makes use of sensing technology and sophisticated computing technologies to make decisions about all aspects of the farm including crop choice, inputs, irrigation, and harvesting.
Food Policy Food policies are developed by governments at different scales to guide food-related decisions and actions. They inform and govern public, private, and non-profit sector actions related to improving food-related outcomes and can create opportunities for stakeholders to work together across sectors.
Food Security Food security is the ability to access safe, nutritious, culturally appropriate, and sufficient food all year round. A person or community is food insecure when people cannot afford or have limited or no access to the food they need to nourish their bodies. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization state that “food insecurity can affect diet quality in different ways, potentially leading to undernutrition as well as. . . obesity.” http://www.fao.org/publications/sofi/2020/en/
Food Sovereignty "Food Sovereignty is the right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems." https://viacampesina.org/en/
Open Source Data A legal protection that ensures that data that is owned and available for use to everyone in a particular community. In the case of Open Food Network, all users have access to all code associated with the platform but must make any alterations or new code available to all other users.
Platform Digital infrastructure or frameworks for different kinds of exchange. For example, Open Food Network is a platform that enables digital food hubs, shops, or farmers markets.
Producer A food enterprise which makes, grows, bakes, cooks, or produces food which it can supply to other businesses for sale. https://guide.openfoodnetwork.org/glossary-of-ofn-terms
Robotics The use of machines to perform tasks previously completed by waged workers. In agriculture, robotics include picking and milking machines, tractors and other farming machines, and packing machines, among other technologies.
Supply Chain All of the components of a system—including organizations, producers, suppliers, people, resources, activities, information, and infrastructures—that get a product to a consumer.
Sustainable Food System Food systems that are “socially just, support local economies; are ecologically regenerative, and foster citizen engagement.” https://fledgeresearch.ca/
Discussion Questions