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  1. Food discourses in Cape Breton: Community, economy, and ecological food practices

    Food discourses in Cape Breton: Community, economy, and ecological food practices

    2025-03-19 22:03:47 | Article | Autor(es): Erna MacLeod | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i1.119

    This project investigates ecological food practices on Cape Breton Island as legacies of traditional lifestyles and responses to the acceleration of global capitalism. I examine the multifarious discourses that frame ecological food practices such as organic gardening and farmers’ markets in...

  2. Constituting community through food charters: A rhetorical-genre analysis

    Constituting community through food charters: A rhetorical-genre analysis

    2025-03-19 22:03:47 | Article | Autor(es): Philippa Spoel, Colleen Derkatch | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i1.144

    Communities across Canada are increasingly developing food charters, with at least 22 regional charters published in Ontario alone. As a rhetorical genre, food charters are persuasive actions that articulate not only the kind of food system to which a community aspires, but also the kind of...

  3. Planning for food sovereignty in Canada? A comparative case study of two rural communities

    Planning for food sovereignty in Canada? A comparative case study of two rural communities

    2025-03-19 22:03:47 | Article | Autor(es): Virginie Lavallée-Picard | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i1.73

    In Canada, most local-governance level food system planning research has been conducted in larger, often urban communities. However, producers in small rural communities conduct the majority of Canada’s agricultural activities. Using case-study research, this paper documents how the rural...

  4. Food and Femininity by Kate Cairns and Josée Johnston

    Food and Femininity by Kate Cairns and Josée Johnston

    2025-03-19 22:03:46 | Review | Autor(es): Jennifer Braun | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.184

    Driven by a central question—“why do so many women care so much about food?”—Cairns and Johnston investigate the contemporary contours and connections between food and femininity, detailing the diverse ways these two things intersect and emerge in women’s lives. Their research is done in a...

  5. Human Rights and the Food Sovereignty Movement: Reclaiming Control by Priscilla Claeys

    Human Rights and the Food Sovereignty Movement: Reclaiming Control by Priscilla Claeys

    2025-03-19 22:03:46 | Review | Autor(es): Kaitlyn Duthie-Kannikkatt | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.181

    Critical discussions of human rights have featured prominently in the development studies literature. While many social actors have utilized human rights to advance their goals, the framework has also been criticized for its tendency to individualize struggles and emphasize legal dimensions of...

  6. Inspiring and informing through food studies

    Inspiring and informing through food studies

    2025-03-19 22:03:46 | Essay | Autor(es): Ellen Desjardins | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i1.156

    Often, the ordinariness of familiar terms or concepts belies their complexity and hidden sides, necessitating closer scrutiny. “Big data” is one such phenomenon, upon which Bronson and Knezevic shine a critical spotlight. Showing how current data sources and data collection technologies differ...

  7. Cultivating community through gardening in Kenora, Ontario

    Cultivating community through gardening in Kenora, Ontario

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Article | Autor(es): Rob Moquin, Alan P. Diduck, A. John Sinclair, Iain J. Davidson-Hunt | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.167

    Community gardens are places where people connect, share, and engage their social and ecological communities. The purpose of this research was to document and communicate participants’ experiences of community-building through community gardening in Kenora, Ontario, Canada. The primary method...

  8. Heroes for the helpless: A critical discourse analysis of Canadian national print media’s coverage of the food insecurity crisis in Nunavut

    Heroes for the helpless: A critical discourse analysis of Canadian national print media’s coverage of the food insecurity crisis in Nunavut

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Article | Autor(es): Bradley Hiebert, Elaine Power | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.149

    In northern Canada, the Inuit’s transition from a culturally traditional to a Western diet has been accompanied by chronic poverty and provoked high levels of food insecurity, resulting in numerous negative health outcomes. This study examines national coverage of Nunavut food insecurity as...

  9. Making better use of what we have: Strategies to minimize food waste and resource inefficiency in Canada

    Making better use of what we have: Strategies to minimize food waste and resource inefficiency in Canada

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Review | Autor(es): Rod MacRae, Anne Siu, Marlee Kohn, Moira Matsubuchi-Shaw, Doug McCallum, Tania Hernandez Cervantes, Danielle Perreault | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.143

    We examined the problems of and solutions to food waste through the main three frames of social science research on food waste: political economy; the cultural turn (the cultures, ideologies and politics of food and consumption); and political ecology. In the course of our collective research...

  10. New CSR in the food system: Industry and non-traditional corporate food interests

    New CSR in the food system: Industry and non-traditional corporate food interests

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Review | Autor(es): Margaret Bancerz | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.171

    Throughout the twentieth century, the food system has not only undergone changes in structure and in process, but has shown a growing transformation in food system governance. Often this transformation involves private actors engaging in the policymaking and governance arena. This paper draws...

  11. Cities and Agriculture: Developing Resilient Urban Food Systems by Henk de Zeeuw and Pay Drechsel (Eds.)

    Cities and Agriculture: Developing Resilient Urban Food Systems by Henk de Zeeuw and Pay Drechsel (Eds.)

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Review | Autor(es): Zhenzhong Si, Jennifer Marshman, Simon Berge, Ning Dai, Tammara Soma, Bryan Dale, Karen Landman, John Bacher, Mashiur Rahman, Charles Z. Levkoe | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.177

    In an age when we are inundated with information, efforts that streamline that information—by sifting kernels of wheat from the chaff—are precious. Our reviews are intended to assist CFS readers faced with a growing body of material relevant to food studies. However, the standard book review...

  12. How Canadians Communicate VI: Food Promotion, Consumption, and Controversy by Charlene Elliott (Ed.)

    How Canadians Communicate VI: Food Promotion, Consumption, and Controversy by Charlene Elliott (Ed.)

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Review | Autor(es): Kathy Dobson, Fleur Esteron, Irena Knezevic, Agnes Malkinson, Scott Mitchell, Andrea Noriega, Chloe Poitevin DesRivieres, Julie Pasho, Antonella Pucci | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.182

    Elliott’s collection brings communication studies to the core of food studies, and this makes it a long-overdue book. While not all authors are communication scholars, the range of topics covered in the book are representative of how enmeshed the study of food and the study of human...

  13. Alternative Food Networks in Quebec

    Alternative Food Networks in Quebec

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Review | Autor(es): Manon Boulianne, Patrick Mundler | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.217

    This commentary reflects on a two-day conference, Réseaux alimentaires alternatifs au Québec. Perspectives comparatives, held in Montreal on May 12 & 13, 2016, during the 84th Congress of ACFAS (Association canadienne-française pour l’avancement des sciences). The event was organized by...

  14. Speaking in Cod Tongues: A Canadian Culinary Journey by Lenore Newman

    Speaking in Cod Tongues: A Canadian Culinary Journey by Lenore Newman

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Review | Autor(es): Ellen Desjardins | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.223

    Book review.

  15. Nourrir la machine humaine. Nutrition et alimentation au Québec, 1860-1945 par Caroline Durand

    Nourrir la machine humaine. Nutrition et alimentation au Québec, 1860-1945 par Caroline Durand

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Review | Autor(es): Manon Boulianne | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.214

    Il est toujours fascinant de prendre connaissance des contextes d’émergence des discours qui cherchent à transformer les normes et les pratiques sociales, ainsi que des véhicules utilisés pour en assurer la diffusion et tenter d’obtenir l’adhésion des publics concernés. Dans cet ouvrage,...

  16. Food and Society: 2nd Edition by Amy E. Guptill, Denise A. Copelton, and Betsy Lucal

    Food and Society: 2nd Edition by Amy E. Guptill, Denise A. Copelton, and Betsy Lucal

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Review | Autor(es): Phoebe Stephens | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.215

    No abstract required (book review).

  17. Transformations revealed through food studies

    Transformations revealed through food studies

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Essay | Autor(es): Ellen Desjardins | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.197

    This issue brings us food-related research and perspectives from across Canada, from Nunavut and the Northwest Territories to central Alberta, Kenora (Ontario), and Nova Scotia. A common thread weaves throughout this work: one of transformative change—either already in progress or still...

  18. Getting to the core of the matter: The rise and fall of the Nova Scotia apple industry, 1862-1980

    Getting to the core of the matter: The rise and fall of the Nova Scotia apple industry, 1862-1980

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Article | Autor(es): Anika Roberts-Stahlbrand | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.165

    This article will apply food regime theory to an examination of the rise and fall of the apple industry in Nova Scotia between 1862 and 1980. From the 1860s until World War II, apples were a booming cross-Atlantic export business that continued the colonial bonds to Britain. But after the war,...

  19. Land-Based programs in the Northwest Territories: Building Indigenous food security and well-being from the ground up

    Land-Based programs in the Northwest Territories: Building Indigenous food security and well-being from the ground up

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Article | Autor(es): Sonia D. Wesche, Meagan Ann F. O'Hare-Gordon, Michael A. Robidoux, Courtney W. Mason | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.161

    Food security in Canada’s North is complex, and there is no singular solution. We argue that land-based wild food programs are useful and effective in contributing to long-term food security, health and well-being for Indigenous communities in the context of changing environmental conditions....

  20. The dilemma of scaling up local food initiatives: Is social infrastructure the essential ingredient?

    The dilemma of scaling up local food initiatives: Is social infrastructure the essential ingredient?

    2025-03-19 22:03:44 | Article | Autor(es): Sean Connelly, Mary Beckie | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.146

    The purpose of this paper is to reflect on and compare two responses to the challenge of scaling up local food initiatives.  Comparative case studies of the Good Food Box in the City of Edmonton and the Rimbey farmers’ market are used to examine the different strategies used to scale up...