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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

“Meat-me”: From flesh machines to individualities. A case for an anti-speciesist degrowth

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  • “Meat-me”: From flesh machines to individualities. A case for an anti-speciesist degrowth

    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

    “Meat-me”: From flesh machines to individualities. A case for an anti-speciesist degrowth

    Author

Abstract

Degrowth, a leading paradigm addressing our socio-ecological crisis, criticizes the highly destructive animal factory-farming industry. However, it does not challenge the commodification of sentient beings and the underlying system that perpetuates the oppression of the "less-than-human." Animals-as-food, reduced to "flesh machines," are exploited with institutional legitimacy rooted in societal belief systems. Drawing upon posthumanist and ecofeminist perspectives, this article argues that to achieve a just transformation, the degrowth proposal must gain ethical congruence and dismantle anthropocentric worldviews. Adopting an anti-speciesist framework becomes crucial to overcoming socio-ecological collapse, fundamentally reshaping our interactions with cohabiting individualities within the biosphere.

Keywords: Degrowth, anthropocentrism, speciesism, animal ethics, commofification of life

How to Cite:

Navarro, E., (2025) ““Meat-me”: From flesh machines to individualities. A case for an anti-speciesist degrowth”, Journal of Political Ecology 32(1): 5834. doi: https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.5834

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Published on
2025-06-28

Peer Reviewed