(Re)productive agri-food systems
For social transformation towards Food Sovereignty
Our research is committed to Food Sovereignty as the political framework to address the socio-environmental unsustainability of the global agri-food system and guarantee the human right to food. We work for social transformation and a living countryside through the promotion of alternative food systems which make rational use of natural resources and address unequal power relations. The feminist perspective crosscuts our research practices, aimed at supporting agroecological transitions towards Food Sovereignty.
Through agroecological governance, knowledge and practices
We study the practices, knowledge and governance settings and institutions that support and tailor agroecological systems. Through the collaboration with administrations and civil society organisations, we participate in the design of public policies in both urban and rural contexts, aiming at the agroecological transition. Technical and scientific approaches are complemented with local, traditional and indigenous agri-food knowledge and practices, from the land to the table, that we aim at eliciting and integrating into decision-making.




