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ContributorsCo-Producers & Hosts: Amanda Di Battista & Laine Young Sound Design & Editing: Adedotun Babajide
GuestJamie-Lynne Varney
Support & FundingWilfrid Laurier University The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Balsillie School for International AffairsCIGI
Music CreditsKeenan Reimer-Watts Adedotun Babajide
ResourcesMoving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG Whose Land Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Right to Food Framework for Tackling Food Waste and Achieving a Just Circular Economy of Food in Vancouver, B.C. Report and Video Food Systems Lab at SFU
Connect with Us:
Email: [email protected] Twitter: @Handpickedpodc Facebook: Handpicked Podcast
Glossary of Terms
Circular Economy
“In a circular economy, nothing is wasted. The circular economy retains and recovers as much value as possible from resources by reusing, repairing, refurbishing, remanufacturing, repurposing, or recycling products and materials. It’s about using valuable resources wisely, thinking about waste as a resource instead of a cost, and finding innovative ways to better the environment and the economy.”
https://www.canada.ca/en/services/environment/conservation/sustainability/circular-economy.html
Food Insecurity
Inadequate access to nutritional, safe and culturally appropriate food due to financial or other constraints.
https://proof.utoronto.ca/food-insecurity/#foodinsecurity
Food Loss
“Food that gets spilled, spoilt or otherwise lost, or incurs reduction of quality and value during its process in the food supply chain before it reaches its final product stage. Food loss typically takes place at production, post-harvest, processing, and distribution stages in the food supply chain.”
https://www.unep.org/thinkeatsave/about/definition-food-loss-and-waste
Food Surplus
“Food surplus occurs when the supply, availability and nutritional requirements of food exceeds the demand for it, and can take place at every stage of the supply chain from farms to households. Food surplus leads to either edible food and other products left unsold at supermarkets or restaurants, or piling up in farms and storages, ultimately resulting in food waste and loss.
Food surplus is not necessarily food waste, but rather a proxy for it. It can be defined as the step before food waste, where producers and consumers consciously and actively discard food.”
https://earth.org/what-is-food-surplus/
Food Waste
“Food that completes the food supply chain up to a final product, of good quality and fit for consumption, but still doesn't get consumed because it is discarded, whether or not after it is left to spoil or expire. Food waste typically (but not exclusively) takes place at retail and consumption stages in the food supply chain.”
https://www.unep.org/thinkeatsave/about/definition-food-loss-and-waste
Regenerative Foodscapes
6 principles: “1) Acknowledging and including diverse forms of knowing and being 2) Taking care of people, animals, and the planet 3) Moving beyond capitalist approaches 4) Commoning the food system 5) Promoting accountable innovations 6) Long-term planning and rural–urban relations”
https://foodsystems.colostate.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Duncanetal.2020HandbookforSustainableandRegenerativeFoodSystems-1.pdf
Right to Food Framework
“The right to food is the right to have unrestricted access to sufficient quantities of food that fulfil physical, spiritual, and cultural needs, produced in ways that support the rights and labour of workers, and obtained in ways that promote dignity, reduce stress, and support social and psychological wellbeing.”
https://www.vancouvereconomic.com/research/a-right-to-food-framework-for-a-just-circular-economy-of-food/
Supply Chain
A food supply chain is the path that food takes from production to consumption and eventually waste.
Theory of Change
Theory of Change is essentially a comprehensive description and illustration of how and why a desired change is expected to happen in a particular context. It is focused in particular on mapping out or “filling in” what has been described as the “missing middle” between what a program or change initiative does (its activities or interventions) and how these lead to desired goals being achieved.
https://www.theoryofchange.org/what-is-theory-of-change/
Discussion Questions
ContributorsCo-Producers & Hosts: Amanda Di Battista & Laine Young Sound Design & Editing: Adedotun Babajide
GuestJamie-Lynne Varney
Support & FundingWilfrid Laurier University The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Balsillie School for International AffairsCIGI
Music CreditsKeenan Reimer-Watts Adedotun Babajide
ResourcesMoving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG Whose Land Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems Right to Food Framework for Tackling Food Waste and Achieving a Just Circular Economy of Food in Vancouver, B.C. Report and Video Food Systems Lab at SFU
Connect with Us:
Email: [email protected] Twitter: @Handpickedpodc Facebook: Handpicked Podcast
Glossary of Terms
Circular Economy
“In a circular economy, nothing is wasted. The circular economy retains and recovers as much value as possible from resources by reusing, repairing, refurbishing, remanufacturing, repurposing, or recycling products and materials. It’s about using valuable resources wisely, thinking about waste as a resource instead of a cost, and finding innovative ways to better the environment and the economy.”
https://www.canada.ca/en/services/environment/conservation/sustainability/circular-economy.html
Food Insecurity
Inadequate access to nutritional, safe and culturally appropriate food due to financial or other constraints.
https://proof.utoronto.ca/food-insecurity/#foodinsecurity
Food Loss
“Food that gets spilled, spoilt or otherwise lost, or incurs reduction of quality and value during its process in the food supply chain before it reaches its final product stage. Food loss typically takes place at production, post-harvest, processing, and distribution stages in the food supply chain.”
https://www.unep.org/thinkeatsave/about/definition-food-loss-and-waste
Food Surplus
“Food surplus occurs when the supply, availability and nutritional requirements of food exceeds the demand for it, and can take place at every stage of the supply chain from farms to households. Food surplus leads to either edible food and other products left unsold at supermarkets or restaurants, or piling up in farms and storages, ultimately resulting in food waste and loss.
Food surplus is not necessarily food waste, but rather a proxy for it. It can be defined as the step before food waste, where producers and consumers consciously and actively discard food.”
https://earth.org/what-is-food-surplus/
Food Waste
“Food that completes the food supply chain up to a final product, of good quality and fit for consumption, but still doesn't get consumed because it is discarded, whether or not after it is left to spoil or expire. Food waste typically (but not exclusively) takes place at retail and consumption stages in the food supply chain.”
https://www.unep.org/thinkeatsave/about/definition-food-loss-and-waste
Regenerative Foodscapes
6 principles: “1) Acknowledging and including diverse forms of knowing and being 2) Taking care of people, animals, and the planet 3) Moving beyond capitalist approaches 4) Commoning the food system 5) Promoting accountable innovations 6) Long-term planning and rural–urban relations”
https://foodsystems.colostate.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Duncanetal.2020HandbookforSustainableandRegenerativeFoodSystems-1.pdf
Right to Food Framework
“The right to food is the right to have unrestricted access to sufficient quantities of food that fulfil physical, spiritual, and cultural needs, produced in ways that support the rights and labour of workers, and obtained in ways that promote dignity, reduce stress, and support social and psychological wellbeing.”
https://www.vancouvereconomic.com/research/a-right-to-food-framework-for-a-just-circular-economy-of-food/
Supply Chain
A food supply chain is the path that food takes from production to consumption and eventually waste.
Theory of Change
Theory of Change is essentially a comprehensive description and illustration of how and why a desired change is expected to happen in a particular context. It is focused in particular on mapping out or “filling in” what has been described as the “missing middle” between what a program or change initiative does (its activities or interventions) and how these lead to desired goals being achieved.
https://www.theoryofchange.org/what-is-theory-of-change/
Discussion Questions