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A panel discussion on food sovereignty in the Upper Valley and beyond featuring voices from Dartmouth and community leaders.
The current national administration continues to perpetrate environmental racism through mass layoffs at the USDA that disrupt vital agricultural research, by eliminating federal climate tools essential for protecting vulnerable communities, and by freezing research grants that disproportionately impact work in community-based and justice-oriented climate and health fields.
Institutions like Dartmouth have been direct perpetrators of similar extractive colonial practices, such as the College's previous investment in fossil fuels. This panel will explore food sovereignty in the Upper Valley and beyond through this lens, exploring the opportunities that may be open in the current political moment to continue our work with feminist, anti-colonialist, and anti-racist methodologies.
Featuring panelists Kenya Lazuli from New Suns Community Center, Valerie Woodhouse from Honey Field Farm, and Charis Boke and Alexandria Casteel from Dartmouth's Anthropology department.
Free and open to the public. Tickets required, get yours here.
The event will be livestreamed, sign up to attend online here.
A recording of the event will be uploaded to YouTube.
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.