Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Weaving resilience and resistance for systemic transformation

This editorial frames resilience and resistance as intertwined forces driving systemic transformation in food systems and beyond. It highlights how grassroots movements across diverse contexts—including Palestine, India, Mexico, Pakistan, Germany, Brazil, Nicaragua, Kenya, Canada, Zimbabwe, Mali, and Colombia—defend territories, seeds, and ecosystems while advancing food sovereignty, agroecology, and care-centered practices. The article critiques industrial agriculture and extractivist models for concentrating power and eroding local knowledge, while emphasizing the political significance of everyday practices of cultivation, sharing, and community care. By weaving together indigenous, peasant, feminist, and transnational perspectives, the editorial underscores that resilience is not only about adaptation but also about building collective power to create ecological alternatives.

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Issue: Issue 3-2025: Weaving Resilience and Resistance
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Author: Clarice Rangel Schreiner
Other authors: Rohan John Antony, Ruby van der Wekken, Georgina Catacora-Vargas, Million Belay, Martha Caswell, Janneke Bruil
Organization: Rooted in Agroecology and Food Sovereignty
Other organizations: Nyéléni Global Forum
Year: 2025
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Country/ies: Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Kenya, Mali, Mexico, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Palestine, Zimbabwe
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Type: Magazine article
Content language: English
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