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Good-Clean-Fair: Perspectives on the Slow Food MovementHansjakob Werlen, Coordinator, Slow Food Philadelphia
Momentum for the Slow Food movement has been gathering for decades as agriculture has increasingly become the domain of commodity food production and multi-national corporations. This brand of agriculture depends on fossil fuels while degrading of the environment and pushing externalities such as environmental damage off on society as a whole. This is a failed model that must somehow change in the future. This approach to farming has produced dire circumstances in this country and even more dire circumstances is less developed countries who have little say in the World Trade Organization. Petrini, the movement’s founder, saw the traditional food ways in Italy falling by the wayside. There was flight from the land and a transformation occurring in which small traditional farmers were losing out and food was increasingly dominated by super markets, resulting in a kind of homogenization of food. He and his followers stood against the disappearance of the traditional food ways of Italy by preserving and promoting the traditional ways various dishes were made, extending back to the farm where traditional methods, vegetables and livestock breeds were emphasized. The movement spread to Europe, Japan and in the 1990’s to the United States where concern was growing that our food traditions were being lost. There has been tremendous activity in preserving food traditions in the U.S. One project, the Ark of Taste, is a catalog of more than 200 foods in danger of extinction in the U.S. By promoting and eating Ark products we help insure their survival. Producers of these foods are also nominated as Ark of Taste producers. Many of these foods date back to pre-colonial times. The Philadelphia region has a lot of these foods. Our motto is Good – Fair – Clean. The Good part pertains to preserving our traditional food ways such as is being accomplished by the Ark of Taste. The Clean part pertains to respecting the environment. Farming sustainably in slow food terms means moving away from farm chemicals toward organic methods, using less intrusive practices and eschewing genetically modified organisms. The Fair part has to do with how people producing agricultural products are treated. What are the wages farmers should have? What standards should be set for the conditions and pay that farm workers receive? Fair means that farming should be done by farmers and not by multi-national corporations. This is an urgent issue. Traditional farmers are being displaced not only in the United States but also in Africa and India as corporate farming expands its dominance. The so-called Green Revolution has hastened this process and proven deleterious to traditional farmers around the world. DISCLAIMER |
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