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ORFC GLOBAL 2021

El Programa Completo

Este programa de siete días ofrece más de 150 sesiones que se han programado con asociados y comunidades agrícolas de los seis continentes. Incluye una mezcla de charlas, mesas redondas, talleres y eventos culturales sobre todo tipo de temas, desde las prácticas agrícolas hasta la justicia climática y los conocimientos indígenas. Por favor, ¡tómese un tiempo para explorar!

Por favor, tenga en cuenta que todas las charlas, paneles de discusión y plenarias están abiertas a todos nuestros delegados y no requieren reservación previa. Los talleres gratuitos también están disponibles, pero se celebrarán en el Zoom y requieren inscripción previa. La inscripción al taller se abrió a todos los delegados inscritos a partir del martes 29 de diciembre de 2020 y se envió por correo electrónico. ¡Inscríbase pronto para evitar decepciones!

Por favor, tenga en cuenta que las horas en el programa en línea de abajo deben aparecer en su zona horaria local.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Jim Aplin

Tony Little

Chair

Ben Raskin

Languages

English

Format

Audio

09:00 GMT
06/01/2023

We Need a Horticultural Revolution

It seems everyone agrees we need a massive increase in vegetable and fruit production and consumption in the UK: for healthier kids and adults; to become more self-sufficient and stop exporting our global footprint; as a core part of the transition to agroecological farming systems; to rebuild local food economies - the list goes on. But how should this be supported and what are the lessons from innovators already doing this?

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Adam Alexander

Catrina Fenton

Katherine Langton

Chair

Tim Lang

Languages

English

Format

Audio, PDF

09:00 GMT
06/01/2023

What’s the Big Deal About Local Food Growing? Thoughts from Wales

With farming policy deferred to the nations, and a Welsh government that has put a renewed emphasis on building a sustainable and vibrant local food production environment, are there lessons to be learned from Wales? This session considers why new enterprises are emerging today, and how horticultural enterprises can champion local, regional and national identity.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Ian Rappel

Jutta Kill

Languages

English

Format

Audio

09:00 GMT
06/01/23

What Price for Saving Nature?

Nature is being financialised. From climate change mitigation to the biodiversity crisis, mainstream environmentalism is turning towards nature commodification as the solution. The hope is that private investors and state actors will release badly needed resources into ‘nature positive solutions’ - if that exercise returns a profit.

Oxford
Workshop

Speakers

Matt Pitts

Elizabeth Cooke

Carol Lodge

Languages

English

Format

Audio, PDF

09:00 GMT
06/01/23

Plantlife’s Meadow-Making Workshop

Join Plantlife for a meadow-making workshop. Participants will learn how to create or restore a wildflower meadow on their land, and learn about the value of meadows and other species-rich grasslands for nature, sustainable farming, carbon storage and climate change resilience.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Samuel Nnah

Hal Rhoades

Sharon Blackie

Chair

Satish Kumar

Languages

English

Format

Audio

09:00 GMT
06/01/23

Ego to Eco: Restoring peoples and places to each other

It is no longer enough to simply conserve what we have. The living ecosystems that sustain us are unravelling, and are in urgent need of restoration. In this need, humanity can find a new role as 're-weavers' of diversity; a keystone species for ecological resurgence. Taking up this new mantle will require us to undo not only the ecological harms of industrial colonialism, but also the psychological, social and political damage that has caused us…

Oxford
Workshop

Languages

English

Format

Audio

09:00 GMT
06/01/23

Using Systemic Mapping for Finding Positive Solutions in Complex Situations: Follow-up (Workshop)

This is a follow-on session from Thursday’s workshop in the Story Museum’s Magic Common Room. The workshop will be limited to 12 places for those who have attended the previous session on systemic mapping and would like to deepen their understanding.

Global
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Fernanda Meister
Paula Scherer
Anna van Der Hurd
Pablo Garcia

Chair

Renata Minerbo

Languages

English

Format

Video

11:00 - 12:30 GMT
Friday, 6 January 2023

What Role Can Philanthropy Play to Catalyze Change in Food Systems?

Join us to hear Brazilian and British funders and grantees have an inspiring and transparent conversation about what is needed to enable innovative solutions to be experimented with and practised. Trust-based philanthropy has been shown to be an effective strategy to support those on the ground to make effective decisions about how to invest their capital, address their real needs, and build relationships of reciprocity that go way beyond the capital itself.

Working bee on honeycomb
Global
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Dee Woods
Kelvin Nicolas
Nikar Yen-ling Tsai
Souad Mahmoud

Chair

Paula Gioia

Languages

English, Português, تونسي

Format

Video

11:00 - 12:30 GMT
Friday, 6 January 2023

Intersectional Struggles for Justice in Food Systems

Food sovereignty for all people cannot be achieved unless structural inequalities in food systems are identified and redressed. In the current society in which discrimination, oppression and corporate power are normalised and where right-wing agendas are advancing, bodies and identities differing the normative order are targeted. Women farmers have long struggled for their rights to be integrated into policies and legal instruments designed to guarantee their rights to food, land, work and social security.

Oxford
Panel Discussion

Speakers

Claire Ratinon
Rachel Solnick

Chair

Jo Kamal

Languages

English

Format

Video

11:00 - 12:30 GMT
Friday, 6 January 2023

Cultivating Belonging: Exploring diasporic relationships to land

In this session, Claire Ratinon and Rachel Solnick will discuss their two very different experiences of identity, diaspora and displacement in relation to land work. Chaired by Jo Kamal, this conversation will see where Claire’s Mauritian Kreyol heritage and Rachel’s Jewish Diasporist identity converge in order to explore what it means to work the land when our ancestral relationship to the earth has been disrupted and how diasporic peoples might - in reclaiming the role…