Cultivating compassion in the global food system: A review of Food in a Just World
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2025.144.019
Keywords:
food justice, animal agriculture, structural violence, climate change, radical democracyAbstract
First paragraph:
Food in a Just World, by Tracey Harris and Terry Gibbs, offers a far-reaching analysis of injustice in the global food system. The book weaves together narratives of nonhuman animal exploitation and discussions of human rights, structural violence, climate change, and environmental degradation to show how the animal-industrial complex (A-IC) both reflects and reinforces deep systemic inequities. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with researchers, workers, policymakers, advocates, and activists from diverse backgrounds, the authors take a critical stance toward our institutions and relationships with nonhuman animals in the food system. Their approach exposes the invisible interconnections of oppression from the perspectives of citizen-consumers, workers, nonhuman animals, and the environment, while building a vision for a just transition rooted in radical democracy, transparency, accountability, and compassion. . . .
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Copyright (c) 2025 Megan Knight

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