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Diverse food economies, multivariant capitalism, and the community dynamic shaping contemporary food systems

Journal

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT JOURNAL
Volume 46, Issue -, Pages I20-I35

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cdj/bsq046

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Community practices are being rehabilitated and reinvigorated due to a set of extraordinary historical circumstances. This paper focuses on the various types of community practice, community discourse, and communitarian reference points influencing national food system dynamics. It begins by illustrating how corporate-dominated food systems have appropriated community concerns and motifs for profit, and describes several of the many counter-responses to corporate-dominated systems. These alternatives are not necessarily anti-capitalist, and are best conceived in Gibson-Graham's post-capitalist politics framework [(2006) A Post-Capitalist Politics, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis] and its language of diverse economies. While numerous alternative systems embed themselves within the capitalist market, they aim to advance multiple ends beyond profitability. Judgements as to whether diverse food economies offer transformative political possibilities lie in answering some fundamental questions about the accumulation and distribution of surplus value and the capacity for people and firms to be accountable to one another for their actions. In discussing this point, I reflect on the reverberations from past community development theorizing.

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