Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Andrew Flachs

Looking forward to reading! Industrial ag’s sins are not just the ecological simplification but political-economic consolidation; there could be an eco socialist solution but communist food production had an awful record. Small farms in nested markets, including schools, offer more hope

3 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Feeding the World as if People Mattered | UAPress

If we focus on production alone, capital (especially when deregulated) leads us to consider all the actual benefits of small farming for community sustainability writ large as externalities. We don’t need more food, we need more farms to feed the world: uapress.arizona.edu/book/feeding...

3 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

Great review, and excellent questions to ask if we’re invested in feeding the world as if people, not capital gains, mattered

3 weeks ago 5 1 1 0
Preview
Feeding the World as if People Mattered | UAPress

Anthropology friends going to SfAA and readers more widely, you can preorder my new book (and others from the press) with code AZSFAA26 for 40% off! uapress.arizona.edu/book/feeding...

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Why Food Policy is Everyone's Business
Why Food Policy is Everyone's Business YouTube video by Robin Hamilton (ARound Robin Production, LLC)

What does a fair food system actually look like? In this Democracy Does podcast episode, @aroundrobin.bsky.social interviews @drflachsophone.bsky.social (Purdue) about tariffs, farm economics, universal school meals, SNAP cuts, and building resilient food systems.

Learn more & listen. ⤵️

1 month ago 2 1 0 0
Why Food Policy is Everyone's Business
Why Food Policy is Everyone's Business YouTube video by Robin Hamilton (ARound Robin Production, LLC)

Fun conversation with Robin Hill on the Democracy Does Podcast: Why Food Policy is Everyone's Business (www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfbd...). We talk tariffs, solidarity, and better ways to feed the world as if people mattered in anticipation of my forthcoming book

1 month ago 5 0 0 0

The Epstein files document what many women researchers have long experienced but rarely seen laid bare so starkly: exclusion operating behind closed doors, shaping who gets funded, invited, mentored, and taken seriously. How many of these networks, norms, and gatekeepers remain in place?

1 month ago 4443 1806 46 58
Advertisement
Preview
Against ‘technology adoption’: troubling a dominant concept through biodiverse farmers’ in-difference to digital agriculture - Agriculture and Human Values Agriculture and Human Values - How do small-scale farmers ‘adopt’ digital agriculture technologies, what is their use for diversified farming, and how do they position themselves...

“farmers’ in-difference also troubles a more fundamental paradigm of ‘technology adoption,’ which inevitably assumes technologies to be at the center of analysis, rather than the farm, good working conditions …”

link.springer.com/article/10.1...

2 months ago 9 4 0 0
Preview
Request for Applications: Food Systems and Public Health Fellowship for Journalists 2026-2027 Cohort Recruitment The Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future (CLF) is pleased to announce its Request for Applications (RFA) for the 2026-2027 cohort of the Food Systems and Public Health Fellowship for Journalists....

Opportunity for early- and mid-career journalists on the food system beat—and those who aspire to be. Applications open for the 2026 Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future Food System Fellowship is now open. Please apply and/or share! clf.jhsph.edu/about-us/new...

2 months ago 4 4 0 0

Tremendous amount of work put into this, but love the addition of an oligarch layer in this GIS

2 months ago 0 0 0 0

Mapping food apartheid in its intersections of racial discrimination, economic segregation, and market consolidation - terrific layer to emphasize for this established pattern of food injustice

2 months ago 0 1 1 0
Post image

47,900,000 Americans, including one in five children, were food insecure in 2024. That was before restrictions to SNAP and higher food prices. The Trump administration has since ceased publication of these reports. Read the final one, by the dedicated USDA ERS team, here ers.usda.gov/sites/defaul...

3 months ago 9 4 0 1
Preview
Opinion | This Is Why Our Rivers Are Turning Into Sewers

Maybe my NYT essay can create common ground: Factory farms should be regulated like factories. Animal poop should be regulated like human poop. We can still fight about other stuff but this should be Big Ag against Everyone Else.

nytimes.com/2026/01/20/opinion/manure-population-rivers-water.html

3 months ago 35 9 1 0
Post image

Only barely edged out by my other favorite published diagram

3 months ago 0 0 0 0
Preview
Are farms in short food supply chains more resilient to external shocks? The assessment of Polish farmers’ perception - Agricultural and Food Economics The aim of the study is to indicate perceived resilience of Polish farms during the COVID-19 pandemic and post-pandemic crisis. Hence, one of our research question is: do farmers involved in short foo...

#Poland: A sample of #farmers who diversified, i.e. who sell 15-50% of their products into short food #supplychains (and not only into normal/long food supply chains), have higher perceived #resilience, i.e. higher perceived adaptability & transformability of their farms: doi.org/10.1186/s401...

3 months ago 5 3 0 0
Post image

It's an incredible effort of imagination to see how much better the world might be with less crap in it. The Anthropause, out today, is Stan Cox's wonderous hymn to the joys of less stuff and more connection. Read it! bookshop.org/p/books/anth...

3 months ago 11 5 0 1
Advertisement

Interesting contrast to the proposed municipal grocery stores in NYC, where the focus is to ensure that a wide set of staples are affordable on the retail end

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

Perhaps some brave soul will show the administration a hobo-dyer projection and they will immediately lose interest

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Wallerstein and Wolf also unsurprised to see empire doing empire stuff

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Kill people and break things seems like an AI generated motto for the technofascists

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Glyphosate expanded massively with a combination of generics and gmo monocultures - the problem with encouraging one poison instead of many is that you’re still encouraging poison doi.org/10.1111/joac...

3 months ago 5 2 1 0

Flachs knows about this.

3 months ago 3 1 0 0

Yes, GMOs are highly studied and there isn’t a reason to think they are worse for health or environment because they are GMO, but the chemical intensive reasons for which they are modified have allowed the expansion of agrochemical use onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....

3 months ago 2 0 0 0
Preview
Domestication, crop breeding, and genetic modification are fundamentally different processes: implications for seed sovereignty and agrobiodiversity - Agriculture and Human Values Genetic modification (GM) of crop plants is frequently described by its proponents as a continuation of the ancient process of domestication. While domestication, crop breeding, and GM all modify the ...

And domestication, a very different set of political, social, ecological relations (link.springer.com/article/10.1...)

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

As ever, important to differentiate between GMOs, which are just a handful of commercial crops grown for industrial agricultural systems, not including wheat mentioned here… (www.ers.usda.gov/topics/crops...)

3 months ago 2 0 1 1

Against a sustainability that presupposes growth as the only path to development, nothing needs to be recovered or created here. If anything, such spaces need to continue as they are against the threat of development and dispossession

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

This is “just surviving” in an already existing, imperfect, sustainability that would be totally invisible in a productivist lens that externalizes social and ecological reproduction. And this is the paradox: there's a lot of sustainability already here, if only it could "count"

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

Bountiful, biodiverse, and socially important homegardens struggle to keep families, the agrobiodiversity they maintain, in place. This work is not sufficient to promise a nice living for young people in and of itself, but it provides an economic and social base to maintain these rural households

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

Farms are vehicles for rural social reproduction, anchoring a diverse economy of everyday exchange. They are a source of pride, a way to gift and participate in cycles of mutual aid; but they exist out of a frustration with the local political economy - there aren't other great options

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
Preview
“We Are Just Surviving”: The Paradox of Robust Homegardens in Northern Bosnia and Herzegovina - Andrew Flachs, Ashley Glenn, 2025 Outside formal supply chains, Bosnian gardens provide meaningful contributions to food security through calories and culturally understood “good” food. Much of ...

Closing out 2025 with lessons on quiet sustainability from Bosnian home gardeners: productive agrobiodiversity and mutual aid, but frustration with a stymied opportunity. Gardens keep a home that one might return to...someday

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...

3 months ago 0 0 1 0