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ORFC 2025 9 – 10 Jan

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4 - 6 January 2023

ORFC 2023 Online Programme

This three-day programme offers 70 sessions with incredible speakers from more than 100 countries. It includes a mix of online-only talks and sessions which are being live-streamed from the in-person ORFC in Oxford. All sessions will be recorded and available to watch on playback. Book tickets now.

View a PDF of the full programme

 Keep scrolling for the list of sessions. Please note the times in the online programme below should display in your local time zone.

We gratefully acknowledge the work of our global partners who have helped put together this programme: La Via Campesina, Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA), PAN Asia Pacific (PANAP), Real Food Media, the Agroecology Fund.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

David Dixon

Lucy Beasley

Camilla Hayselden-Ashby

Paloma Gormley

Summer Islam

Chair

Tim Crabtree

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Hemp: Key element of a decentralised biobased economy?

Hemp could become a key element of regenerative farming. There are thousands of potential uses for the fibre, woody core and seeds. It sequesters carbon faster than any other crop, and this carbon can be locked up, for example, into innovative construction products.

Oxford

Speakers

Marthe Kiley-Worthington

Samar Khan

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Cattle as Translators of the Land

Cows have incredibly intimate relationships with land, which raises questions about whether they can communicate with plants, soil, fungi and microbes. Perhaps cows can receive instruction from the land about what it needs? If so, they are amazing translators that we can learn from.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

George Young

Luke Dale Harris

Rebecca Mayhew

Alastair Trickett

Chair

Sarah Langford

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

How Farmers can Contribute to Meaningful Food System Change

As food insecurity, climate change and biodiversity loss pressurise food production, what can farmers do to help shape a food system that nourishes people, restores our environment and adapts to changing weather? This discussion asks how farmers can contribute to meaningful food system change at a farm level.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Mark Simmonds

Helen Woodcock

Chris Walsh

Languages

English

Format

Audio, PDF

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Sharing Lessons from Kindling Farm’s £1 Million Community Shares Campaign

The Kindling Trust is the latest organisation to run a community shares offer to attract investment to purchase a farm. The campaign surpassed all expectations, raising over a million pounds with the support of over 620 investors, double the original target.

Oxford
Workshop

Speakers

Kelly Carlisle

Rubi Orozco Santos

Esperanza Pallana

Chair

Anna Sulan Masing

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Unceded Voices: Rematriating the narrative

Mainstream food media is a largely White-controlled and culturally homogenous landscape. This means the accompanying narratives about food culture and justice are shaped by a predominantly White and often male lens. Join us in a conversation with practitioners and funders who are changing this.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Ashley Wheeler

Lisa Houston

Richie Walsh

Adam Alexander

Chair

Sinéad Fortune

Languages

English

Format

Audio, PDF

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Seed Stories from Across the UK and Ireland

When seeds are sown, gifted or packed on journeys, they carry stories. Stories of where they come from, whose hands saved them, which meals were cooked from their bounty and in which soil they were sown. In this storytelling circle hosted by the Seed Sovereignty Programme, we will hear from growers across the British Isles about the seeds which matter most to them.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Sue Stuart-Smith

Jonny Bruce

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

The Garden as Refuge: The healing power of nature with Sue Stuart-Smith

The garden is often seen as a refuge, a place to forget worldly cares, removed from the real life that lies outside. But when we get our hands in the earth we connect with the cycle of life in nature, through which destruction and decay are followed by regrowth and renewal. Sue Stuart-Smith and Jonny Bruce will discuss how gardening can answer deep existential needs of self and society.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Sophie Mott

Hywel Morgan

Denise Walton

Chair

Lucy Bjorck

Languages

English

Format

Audio, PDF

11:00 GMT
06/01/2023

Making the Best Use of Our Land: What’s the right choice for your farm in the transition to a nature positive, net zero, good food future?

In order to address the climate and nature crises, we need to make better use of our land, and the agricultural sector has a major role to play. Making the best use of our land requires informed decision-making around the trade-offs, benefits and economic viability of different land uses in the context of wider UK landscapes.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Suzanne Wynn

Monica Wilde

Mike Robinson

Chair

Dan Saladino

Languages

English

Format

Audio

11:00 GMT
06/01/23

What Role Could Hunting and Gathering Play in Feeding our Nation?

In Eating to Extinction, Dan Saladino contends that by any measure hunting and gathering has been our most successful lifestyle to date. Whilst it is rare to find people existing entirely by this means today, the Hadza tribe is one such example and amongst them modern diseases are almost nonexistent. Herbalist Mo Wilde lived for a year entirely on free wild food foraged in Scotland, documenting her findings in The Wilderness Cure. Defra recently consulted…