TY - JOUR
T1 - Thinking food like an East European: A critical reflection on the framing of food systems
AU - Jehlicka, P
AU - Grivins, M
AU - Visser, Oane
AU - Balazs, B
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Drawing on our long-term research experiences, in this deliberately provocative but also
paper we argue that international food and agriculture studies are a research area that would
particularly benefit from insights obtained from research conducted in the world’s peripheries—in this
case, specifically from insights on East European food systems. Instead of seeing them as textbook
case studies of undeveloped, traditional and hence uninspiring systems, we propose to study them
from the East European perspective. This enables us to move away from an unidirectional
development path and to acknowledge the diversity, resilience and unintended but real sustainability
of the melange of East European formal and informal food systems. Such endeavour reveals food that
1
reflexive
is not locked in food chains, food initiatives or diets. It recognises meanings that go beyond the
conventional food system terminology and are rooted in surrounding contexts. Evidence from Eastern
Europe reveals a rich diversity of food practices challenging normative assumptions and neatly
structured explanatory models underlying Western food system scholarship.
AB - Drawing on our long-term research experiences, in this deliberately provocative but also
paper we argue that international food and agriculture studies are a research area that would
particularly benefit from insights obtained from research conducted in the world’s peripheries—in this
case, specifically from insights on East European food systems. Instead of seeing them as textbook
case studies of undeveloped, traditional and hence uninspiring systems, we propose to study them
from the East European perspective. This enables us to move away from an unidirectional
development path and to acknowledge the diversity, resilience and unintended but real sustainability
of the melange of East European formal and informal food systems. Such endeavour reveals food that
1
reflexive
is not locked in food chains, food initiatives or diets. It recognises meanings that go beyond the
conventional food system terminology and are rooted in surrounding contexts. Evidence from Eastern
Europe reveals a rich diversity of food practices challenging normative assumptions and neatly
structured explanatory models underlying Western food system scholarship.
U2 - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.04.015
DO - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.04.015
M3 - Article
SN - 0743-0167
VL - 76
SP - 286
EP - 295
JO - Journal of Rural Studies
JF - Journal of Rural Studies
ER -