Handpicked: Stories from the Field

Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems

Presented by the Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems, Handpicked: Stories from the Field is a podcast series that showcases research that drives positive change in our food systems—ways we produce, gather, eat, understand and dispose of our food. Produced and hosted by Laine Young and Dr. Charlie Spring, the series presents compelling, real-life stories of food practitioners, such as farmers, policymakers and activists. Episodes follow researchers and community partners in their efforts to make their food systems more economically, environmentally and socially sustainable.

  1. APR 15

    Season 5, Episode 3 - "Only as good as the organizing that accompanies it": Filmmaking as Food System Solidarity, a Conversation with Raj Patel

    Season 5 Episode 3 – "Only as good as the organizing that accompanies it": Filmmaking as Food System Solidarity, a Conversation with Raj Patel  Featuring: Raj Patel   In this special episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we sit down with renowned author, activist, and filmmaker Raj Patel for an intimate, wide-ranging conversation about food justice, climate change, and solidarity across difference. The discussion takes listeners behind the scenes of his decade-long documentary project The Ants and the Grasshopper, co-directed with Zak Piper and centered on the powerful leadership of Malawian farmer and activist Anita Chitaya, and the work of Soils, Food, & Healthy Communities.   This episode explores how farmer-led agroecology, gender justice, and climate action are deeply intertwined. Raj reflects on the challenges and lessons of creating a truly participatory and decolonizing filmmaking process, one that ultimately shifted creative control toward Anita herself demonstrating a more ethical approach to telling stories from the Global South. The conversation dives into key themes raised by the film: the gendered burdens of food and care work, the links between climate change and domestic violence, and the role of religion, race, and class in shaping food systems politics.   Listeners also hear about the film's impact beyond the screen, from grassroots screenings in churches and social movements to its use as a tool for organizing. Throughout the episode, Raj emphasizes that real change comes not from individual actions or pity, but from collective organizing, movement-building, and an ethic of mutual liberation.    Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Dr. Laine Young & Dr. Charlie Spring   Sound Design & Editing: Laine Young    Guests  Raj Patel    Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs     Music Credits  Keenan Reimer-Watts    Resources Soils, Food & Healthy Communities (please support if you can) The Ants & the Grasshopper Film Website Film Trailer Where to Watch Apple TV Kanopy Hoopla Organizations/Projects La Via Campesina (international food sovereignty movement) MST (Brazil's Landless Workers Movement) International Shack Dwellers Movement National Family Farm Coalition National Farmers Union National Black Food & Justice Alliance Voicing Change Further Reading Patel, R., & Goodman, J. (2020). The Long New Deal. Journal of Peasant Studies, 47(3), 431–463.  Lentz, E., Beznwe Kerr, R., Patel, R., Dakishoni, L., & Lupafya, E. (2018). The invisible hand that rocks the cradle: On the limits of time use surveys. Development and Change, 50, 301-328.   Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@wlu.ca  LinkedIn Instagram Facebook   Glossary of Terms   Agroecology  A way of farming that combines ecological science with farmer knowledge, emphasizing sustainability, biodiversity, and social justice.  Climate Justice  The idea that climate change is not just environmental, but social and political, with the greatest harms often falling on those least responsible.  Decolonizing Storytelling / Filmmaking  Practices that shift power over narratives toward the communities represented, challenging extractive or colonial approaches to media.  Food Justice  An approach to food systems that focuses on equity, who has access to good food, who produces it, and how power shapes those realities.  Food Sovereignty   The right of people and communities to define their own food systems, including cultural foodways, land access, and governance.  https://viacampesina.org/en/what-is-food-sovereignty/  Global North / Global South  Terms describing global inequalities rooted in colonialism, where wealth and power are unevenly distributed.  La Vía Campesina  A global movement of peasants and farmers advocating for food sovereignty and agrarian justice.   https://viacampesina.org/en/international-peasants-voice/ Mutual Liberation  The principle that justice and freedom are interconnected. No group can be free while others are oppressed.   Patriarchy  Social systems in which power is largely held by men, shaping inequalities in labor, decision-making, and control over resources.  Reproductive Labor (Care Work)  Often unpaid or undervalued work (cooking, caregiving, and subsistence farming) that sustains households and communities.  Solidarity  Collective action rooted in shared struggle and mutual responsibility, not charity or pity.    Discussion Questions How does the film challenge conventional representations and documentaries of hunger and food insecurity, especially in the Global South?  "You can't tackle hunger without tackling gender inequality". How does the Ants and the Grasshopper convey different threads of Anita's story (e.g. her marriage, her journey to America) to reveal connections between patriarchy, food systems, and racial capitalism (a framework asserting that capitalism is inherently dependent on racism)?   How does Anita organize effectively for change across the huge geographical and wealth gaps evident in the film? For example, what is the role of religion? How can discomfort and difference be leveraged as potent nodes for conversation and change?  What does it mean to be an activist for just food systems, for a liveable planet? What is the role for feelings of pity or even empathy, and how can we move beyond this towards solidarity or 'mutual liberation'? What is the role for social movements? And what does Raj mean by saying 'to be an activist is to liberate yourself'?

    52 min
  2. JAN 30

    Season 5, Episode 2 - "Taking power into their own hands ": Women Leading Food Systems Change in Canada's North, Ecuador, and Uganda

    Season 5 Episode 2 - "Taking power into their own hands ": Women Leading Food Systems Change in Canada's North, Ecuador, and Uganda  Featuring: Dr. Alison Blay-Palmer, Dr. Andrea Brown, and Carla Johnston  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we take listeners behind the scenes of a special International Women's Day panel hosted by the Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems. This event brought together women scholars and practitioners working across diverse food systems in Ecuador, Canada's Northwest Territories, and Uganda.  Featuring insights from Dr. Alison Blay-Palmer, Carla Johnston, Dr. Andrea Brown, and your co-host, Dr. Laine Young, the episode explores how gender justice in food systems is deeply interconnected with migration, Indigenous governance, urbanization, power, and lived experience. Through case studies on urban agriculture in Quito, Indigenous food governance and agroecology in Canada's North with the Sambaa K'e First Nation and Ka'a'gee Tu First Nation, the Committee on World Food Security for the Voluntary Guidelines on Gender Equality and Women and girls empowerment, and migrant food insecurity in Kampala, the speakers reflect on feminist and intersectional research, positionality, and the importance of community-based knowledge.  Together, they ask timely questions about who produces knowledge, whose voices are prioritized in research and policy, and how women and gender-diverse people are shaping more just and resilient food systems locally and globally.  Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Dr. Laine Young & Dr. Charlie Spring   Sound Design & Editing: Laine Young    Guests  Dr. Alison Blay-Palmer  Dr. Andrea Brown  Carla Johnston    Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs     Music Credits  Keenan Reimer-Watts    Resources    Price, M.J., Latta, A., Temmer, J., Johnston, C., Chiot, L., Jumbo, J., Scott, K., & Spring, A. (2022) "Agroecology in the North: centering Indigenous food sovereignty and land stewardship in agriculture 'frontiers'". Agriculture and Human Values.  Johnston, C. & Spring, A. (2021) "Grassroots and Global Governance: can global-local linkages foster food systems resilience for small northern Canadian communities?" Sustainability. 13(2415).    Brown, A.M. (2024). Refugee Protection and Food Secuirity in Kampala, Uganda. Migration & Food Security (MiFOOD) Paper No. 18.   Brown, A.M. (2022). Co-productive urban planning: Protecting and expanding food security in Uganda's secondary cities. In Liam Riley and Jonathan Crush (eds). Transforming Urban Food Systems in Secondary Cities in Africa. Palgrave  Young, L. N. (2025). Operationalizing intersectionality analysis for urban agriculture in Quito, Ecuador. Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive). 2762.   Rodríguez, A., Jácome-Polit, D., Santandreu, A., Paredes, D., & Álvaro, N. P. (2022). Agroecological urban agriculture and food resilience: The Case of Quito, Ecuador. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 6.   Theory of Water: Leanne Betasamosake Simpson  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land    Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  LinkedIn: Handpicked: Stories from the Field Podcast  Facebook: Handpicked Podcast     Glossary of Terms  Feminist Research   Research that centers gendered power relations, values lived experience and seeks social justice and equity.  Food Security  Having reliable access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets dietary needs and preferences.  https://www.wfp.org/stories/food-security-what-it-means-and-why-it-matters  Food Sovereignty   The right of people and communities to define their own food systems, including cultural foodways, land access, and governance.  https://viacampesina.org/en/what-is-food-sovereignty/  Gender-Diverse   Encompassing identities beyond the binary categories of woman and man.  Global Food Governance  International institutions, policies, and processes that shape food systems and food security worldwide.  Indigenous Governance  Decision-making systems rooted in Indigenous laws, knowledge, and self-determination.  Intersectionality   A framework that examines how overlapping identities (such as gender, race, class, Indigeneity, and migration status) interact with systems and structures of power to shape lived experiences.  Positionality  The recognition of how a researcher's identity, background, and social location influence the research process.  Reflexivity  Ongoing critical self-reflection by researchers about their role, assumptions, and impact.    Discussion Questions  In what ways do women act as knowledge holders, leaders, and connectors within food systems across different contexts? How do global governance frameworks (like the UN Committee on World Food Security) both support and limit gender justice and Indigenous rights?  What similarities emerge across the case studies in Quito, the Northwest Territories, and Kampala despite their very different contexts? How do positionality and reflexivity shape the ethics and outcomes of research conducted across cultures and geographies? What does an intersectional feminist approach reveal about food systems that gender-neutral or technical approaches often miss?    Bringing Intersectionality into Research Practice: Questions to Ask Yourself as a Researcher    Where does knowledge come from and what am I counting as knowledge?   Who's bringing this knowledge forward?   How do the power relations present impact my results? How?   Why do I need to think about scale?   Am I using reflexivity in this research?   How has history impacted where we are?   Am I applying social justice principles?   Am I promoting and/or furthering equity in the research that I'm doing?  How does resilience and resistance impact the work that's being done?

    49 min
  3. 2025-12-02

    Season 5, Episode 1 - "Food as Fertile Ground for Change" Cultivating Community: Food Justice in the Bow Valley and Beyond

    Season 5, Episode 1 - "Food as Fertile Ground for Change" Cultivating Community: Food Justice in the Bow Valley and Beyond Featuring: Dr. Lauren Kepkiewicz, Avni Soma, Syma Habib, Jun Cacayuran, Melissa West Morrison, & Dr. Tatenda Mambo  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, our conversation comes from the Bow Valley in Alberta, where a group of organizers, researchers, and community leaders gathered in 2024 to talk about food justice and the everyday work of reshaping food systems. In this episode, Charlie Spring sits down with the event's co-organizers, Dr. Lauren Kepkiewicz and Avni Soma, to look back on what unfolded at their "Cultivating Community" gathering.  The episode brings together stories about community-led food aid, Indigenous food relationships, regenerative agriculture, migrant community organizing, and the emotional power of food to connect and transform. Alongside Lauren and Avni's reflections, listeners hear short excerpts from the event's panellists, Syma Habib, Jun Cacayuran, Melissa West Morrison, and Dr. Tatenda Mambo, whose perspectives and insights bring important nuance to the conversation.  Rather than framing food systems as problems to "fix," the episode leans into questions of relationship, responsibility, and the slow, often messy work of imagining something better together. It's a thoughtful, grounded start to the season, and an invitation to consider what food justice looks like in our own communities.    Contributors Co-Producers & Hosts: Dr. Laine Young & Dr. Charlie Spring   Sound Design & Editing: Laine Young    Guests  Dr. Lauren Kepkiewicz  Avni Soma  Syma Habib  Jun Cacayuran  Melissa West Morrison  Dr. Tatenda Mambo    Support & Funding  SSHRC Partnership Engage Grant (Lauren Kepkiewicz, Marit Rosol, Elizabeth Vibert, Eric Holt-Gimenez, and Charlie Spring)  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs     Music Credits  Keenan Reimer-Watts    Resources    Filipino Organization in the Rocky Mountains (FORM)  Kepkiewicz, L. & Cacayuran, J. (2022). Bringing ayuda and bayanihan to the Rockies. Mountain Life, Rocky Mountain, pp. 30.  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land    Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@wlu.ca  LinkedIn: Handpicked: Stories from the Field Podcast Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    56 min
  4. 2024-05-31

    Season 4, Episode 6 - Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change - Team Reflections on Podcasting for Social Change

    Season 4: Episode 6 – Handpicked Presents Voicing Change - Team Reflections on Podcasting for Social Change    Featuring:   In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we present the last of this season featuring the Voicing Change podcast, in an episode called 'Team Reflections on Podcasting for Social Change' in which the whole Voicing Change team got together (virtually!) to reflect on some of the lessons learned in the process of co-developing a methodology for transnational and interdisciplinary podcasting. Responding to the question "What does 'voicing change' mean to you in the context of being part of this academic Community of Practice?", team members from Canada, Kenya and Brazil discuss a number of emerging lessons, including how we co-construct meaning, the conditions necessary to elicit- and truly hear- others' voices, and thoughts on the opportunities- and challenges- of the podcast format as a way for academics to really value the voices and experiences of our interlocutors. Voicing change, it seems, is change itself.    Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Laine Young & Charlie Spring   Sound Design & Editing: Narayan Subramoniam     Guests  Enock Mac'Ouma, Andres Kathunzi, Olga Millicent Awuor, Eve Nimmo, Brenda Rotter, Laureen Silva, Alessandra de Carvalho, Renata Kempf, and Andrew Spring.     Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)    Music Credits  Ali Razmi  Keenan Reimer-Watts  Resources  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land  Voicing Change   Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  CedErva  Rongo University     Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  Twitter/X: @Handpickedpodc   Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    50 min
  5. 2024-05-26

    Season 4, Episode 5 – Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change – "Agroecology in Kenya"

    Season 4, Episode 5– Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change – "Agroecology in Kenya"  Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Olga Awuor, Laine Young & Charlie Spring   Featuring: Clark Siaji, Caleb Omolo, Andres Kathunzi  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we present an episode of the Voicing Change Podcast called, 'Agroecology in Kenya'. Voicing Change team member and radio journalist Olga Millicent Awuor interviews two community leaders in agroecological and permacultural food production in the Migori County area. They consider alternative modes of farming as pathways to greater food sovereignty, especially for marginalized groups including women and youth. How can movements and practices for agroecology support decent livelihoods while restoring ecological diversity and resilience, and what are the barriers to change in Kenya, where agrifood policy tends to encourage monocultural production for export?  Voicing Change Team: Enock Mac'Ouma, Andres Kathunzi, Evelyn Nimmo, Renata Kempf, Brenda Rotter, Laureen Silva, Alessandra de Carvalho, Murilo Siqueira, Andrew Spring    Sound Design & Editing: Narayan Subramoniam  Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)  Music Credits Ali Razmi  Keenan Reimer-Watts  Resources  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land  Voicing Change   Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Rongo University  CedErva  Rongo University  Agroecology at the FAO  Growing Small featuring Caleb's forest garden (YouTube)  Wachna Greenworld CBO (Facebook)  Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  Twitter/X: @Handpickedpodc   Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    35 min
  6. 2024-05-16

    Season 4, Episode 4 - Handpicked Presents: The Voicing Change Podcast - "Agroecology in Canada and Brazil "

    Season 4: Episode 3 – Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change – "Agroecology in Canada and Brazil"   Featuring: Dr Andrew Spring, Dr Eve Nimmo, Dr Erin Nelson  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we present an episode of the Voicing Change Podcast called, 'Agroecology in Canada and Brazil' in which we hear from three researchers investigating what agroecology means and looks like on the ground. Dr Erin Nelson describes her own discovery of agroecology in Cuba and Ontario and how she realized that it's about more than just a set of techniques but also about a change of mindset in how we use land and resources. Additionally, it calls for knowledge co-creation between the experiential knowledge of food producers and researchers- and using this knowledge to nourish social movements that can transform agrifood policy and practices. Dr Eve Nimmo describes the Indigenous knowledge roots of agroecology in Latin America and describes agroecology as a way to work with farmers growing food in traditional ways in Brazilian forests. Dr Andrew Spring links this to Indigenous stewardship in northern Canada. But does it produce enough food?  Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Laine Young & Charlie Spring   Voicing Change Team: Olga Awuor, Enock Mac'Ouma, Andres Kathunzi, Evelyn Nimmo, Renata Kempf, Brena Rotter, Laureen Silva, Alessandra de Carvalho, Murilo Siqueira, Andrew Spring Sound Design & Editing: Narayan Subramoniam  Guests Dr Erin Nelson Dr Eve Nimmo Dr Andrew Spring   Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)  Music Credits  Ali Razmi  Keenan Reimer-Watts  Resources  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land  Voicing Change   Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  CedErva  Rongo University Agroecology at the FAO National Association of Small Farmers (Cuba) Ecological Farmers Association of Ontario    Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  Twitter/X: @Handpickedpodc   Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    24 min
  7. 2024-05-08

    Season 4, Episode 3 - Handpicked Presents: The Voicing Change Podcast - "Forests, Food & People - Part 2"

    Season 4: Episode 3 – Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change - "Forests, Food, and People- Part 2"  Featuring:  Dr. Eve Nimmo, Dr. Jennifer Baltzer, Dr. Zach Ngalo, and Dr. Andre Lacerda  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we present an episode of the Voicing Change Podcast called, "Forests, Food, and People – Part 2". This is the second of a two part episode where Voicing Change team member Eve Nimmo interviews three forest researchers in Southern Brazil, Migori County, Kenya, and Northern Canada about relationships between forests, food and people. In this episode we hear about threats facing forests and forest communities- and how those communities and their allies are fighting back.     Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Laine Young & Charlie Spring   Voicing Change Team: Olga Awuor, Enock Mac'Ouma, Andres Kathunzi, Evelyn Nimmo, Renata Kempf, Brena Rotter, Laureen Silva, Alessandra de Carvalho, Murilo Siqueira, Andrew Spring Sound Design & Editing: Narayan Subramoniam     Guests  Dr. Eve Nimmo Dr. Jennifer Baltzer Dr. Zach Ngalo Dr. Andre Lacerda    Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)    Music Credits  Ali Razmi  Keenan Reimer-Watts     Resources  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land  Voicing Change   Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  CedErva  Rongo University  Embrapa      Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  Twitter/X: @Handpickedpodc   Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    26 min
  8. 2024-05-03

    Season 4, Episode 2 - Handpicked Presents: The Voicing Change Podcast - "Forests, Food, & People- Part 1"

    Season 4: Episode 2 – Handpicked Presents: Voicing Change - "Forests, Food, and People- Part 1"  Featuring: Dr. Eve Nimmo, Dr. Jennifer Baltzer, Dr. Zach Ngalo, and  Dr. Andre Lacerda  In this episode of Handpicked: Stories from the Field, we present an episode of the Voicing Change Podcast called, "Forests, Food, and People – Part 1". This is the first of a two part episode where our guests will tell us about relationships between forests, food and people in different places. You'll hear about the different types of forests that our guests work in, how people use these forests, and how the forests are managed. Voicing Change team member Eve Nimmo interviews three forest researchers in Southern Brazil, Migori County, Kenya, and Northern Canada.  Contributors  Co-Producers & Hosts: Laine Young & Charlie Spring   Voicing Change Team: Olga Awuor, Enock Mac'Ouma, Andres Kathunzi, Evelyn Nimmo, Renata Kempf, Brena Rotter, Laureen Silva, Alessandra de Carvalho, Murilo Siqueira, Andrew Spring Sound Design & Editing: Narayan Subramoniam  Guests  Dr. Eve Nimmo Dr. Jennifer Baltzer Dr. Zach Ngalo Dr. Andre Lacerda  Support & Funding  Wilfrid Laurier University  The Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  Balsillie School for International Affairs  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)  Music Credits  Ali Razmi  Keenan Reimer-Watts    Resources  Moving Beyond Acknowledgments- LSPIRG  Whose Land  Voicing Change   Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems  CedErva  Embrapa  Rongo University  Connect with Us:  Email: Handpickedpodcast@WLU.ca  Twitter/X: @Handpickedpodc   Facebook: Handpicked Podcast

    24 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Presented by the Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems, Handpicked: Stories from the Field is a podcast series that showcases research that drives positive change in our food systems—ways we produce, gather, eat, understand and dispose of our food. Produced and hosted by Laine Young and Dr. Charlie Spring, the series presents compelling, real-life stories of food practitioners, such as farmers, policymakers and activists. Episodes follow researchers and community partners in their efforts to make their food systems more economically, environmentally and socially sustainable.