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Grassroots Special Section: 'Post-growth food systems for a just social-ecological transition within planetary boundaries'. Edited by CE Nedelciu, JB Hinton, M Oostdijk, K Benabderrazik, LG Elsler

Beyond growth in food systems: Cultivating seeds of change 

Authors

Abstract

The special issue Post-growth food systems for a just social-ecological transition within planetary boundaries explores post-growth and degrowth approaches that advocate for sufficiency, care, regeneration, and the democratization of food systems. It shows that post-growth food initiatives face multiple structural barriers, including capitalist systems that prioritize profit over ecological and social well-being, colonial legacies that affect land access and cultural resilience, patriarchal regimes that undervalue care and regeneration, and dominant Western knowledge systems that dismiss and devalorize relational and experiential ways of knowing. Despite these barriers, there are seeds of hope. What emerges from the special issue is the importance of building alliances, fostering critical food systems literacy, and embracing artistic and culturally rooted practices to reimagine our relationships with food, land, and each other. We argue that there is a need to support diverse methodologies and (re)center marginalized perspectives in academia. A meaningful and extensive conversation around science-making and the societal relevance of academia in transforming food systems is long overdue.

Keywords: Food systems transformation, post-growth, social-ecological transformation, degrowth, knowledge systems

How to Cite:

Nedelciu, C. E., Hinton, J., Oostdijk, M., Benabderrazik, K. & Elsler, L. G., (2025) “Beyond growth in food systems: Cultivating seeds of change ”, Journal of Political Ecology 32(1): 10197. doi: https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.10197

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Funding

Name
SEAS CO-FUND postdoc: European Commission
Funding ID
101034309
Name
University of Bergen

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Published on
2025-12-01

Peer Reviewed