4.4 Article

Food sovereignty and property in Cuba and the United States

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEASANT STUDIES
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 1019-1036

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03066150.2021.1912026

Keywords

Usufruct; Cuba; property; food sovereignty; land

Funding

  1. Association of American Geographers: [AAG Research Grant]
  2. UCL IMPACT
  3. University of Georgia: [Office of International Education]

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Food sovereignty advocates for agroecological farming methods to reduce food insecurity by changing the political relations between people, land, and food policy. Reframing the social relationship to land through property is crucial in making food more accessible. The paper examines the case of usufruct land rights in Cuba as a framework for addressing limitations in producer autonomy and suggesting solutions towards the goal of food sovereignty.
Food sovereignty promotes agroecological farming methods and the reduction of food insecurity through changing political relations between people, land and food policy. Market orientations to land and private property in liberal democracies restrict access to food, and thus for food sovereigntists, reframing the social relationship to land through property is key to making food more available. This paper examines the case of usufruct land rights in Cuba as a framework for reworking land rights. We identify key limitations that impair producer autonomy, suggesting how different orientations toward property present unique problems and potential solutions towards the goal of food sovereignty.

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