8 episodes

Stories of land transformation with Agrarian Trust.

Commons Groundswell Agrarian Trust

    • Business
    • 5.0 • 2 Ratings

Stories of land transformation with Agrarian Trust.

    S1:E7 - Growing Future Farmers - Tyrone Cherry III of CommUNITY Oasis Farm

    S1:E7 - Growing Future Farmers - Tyrone Cherry III of CommUNITY Oasis Farm

    Episode 7: Growing Future Farmers - Tyrone Cherry III of CommUNITY Oasis Farm

    In this episode, we speak with Tyrone Cherry III, an educator, organizer, and farmer in Petersburg, Virginia. We discuss the Community Oasis Farm, why Tyrone wanted to put the farm into the Central Virginia Agrarian Commons, and the impacts this land is having on the youth of Petersburg and the community as a whole. 

    About Tyrone Cherry III:
    Tyrone Cherry is an educator, organizer, and gardener who has dedicated himself to the growth and well-being of the Petersburg, VA community. As founder of Petersburg League of Urban Growers, project assistant of the farmers market, and co-coordinator of the Power of Produce hub through the Petersburg Healthy Opportunities, Cherry has played a critical role in expanding access to healthy, affordable food in Petersburg. 

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” and “My Spirit” by SHUNGU 
    www.shungujazz.bandcamp.com

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers 
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad 

    Published on April 21, 2023

    • 38 min
    Land Sovereignty is Food Sovereignty

    Land Sovereignty is Food Sovereignty

    Episode Notes
    Episode 7: Land Sovereignty is Food Sovereignty- Germaine Jenkins of Fresh Future Farm

    In this episode, we speak with Germaine Jenkins of Fresh Future Farm.  We discuss her journey with land tenure and what it means for a farm to be on a month-to-month lease, the effects of gentrification on the community, the relationship between land sovereignty and food sovereignty, and Fresh Future Farm’s exciting next chapter.

    About Germain Jenkins  (from www.freshfuturefarm.org):
    In 2014, Germaine co-founded Fresh Future Farm on a vacant city lot with limited resources. For the last six years she has led a team that created abundance in a disinvested neighborhood. Jenkins has been featured in Food & Wine, New York Times, Essence Magazine and is now the subject of a full-length documentary describing Fresh Future Farm’s work to build community wealth and creative placemaking.

    Germaine’s movement allies include Urban Growers Collective (Chicago), CooperateWNC (Old Fort, NC), Black Minimalists, League of Creative Interventionists, Equity at the Table (EATT), and Black Lives Matter of Greater NY.

    Fresh Future Farm
    Website: www.freshfuturefarm.org
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/freshfuturefarm
    Instagram: @freshfuturefarm 
    DONATE: https://donorbox.org/fff-expansion

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” and “Universal Harmony of Humanity” by SHUNGU 
    www.hotrecordsociete.bandcamp.com

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers 
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad 

    Published on April 6, 2023

    • 42 min
    Sacred Reciprocity

    Sacred Reciprocity

    Episode Notes
    Episode 5: Sacred Reciprocity - Luis Marcos and Leah Vinton of Comunidad Maya Pixan Ixim

    In this episode, we speak with Luis Marcos and Leah Vinton of Communidad Maya Pixan Ixim, a nonprofit dedicated to empowering the Mayan community in Nebraska. Luis talks about his experience as a member of the displaced Q’anjob’al Maya people and his relationship with his ancestral homeland, Leah and Luis discuss the importance of building relationships with existing Native groups in Nebraska, and their plans for an agriculture program.

    About Luis Marcos (from https://www.pixanixim.org)
    Luis Marcos is Co-Executive Director and one of the original founders of Comunidad Maya Pixan Ixim. Luis is passionate about Maya and Indigenous agriculture sciences also known as regenerative agriculture. Luis Marcos is a proven leader who has established important relationships with people from all levels of society and around the globe. Through his work with the Omaha Nation and Indigenous nations across borders, he has been named as Ambassador of the Q'anjob'al, Akateko, Chuj, and Popti Nations with the Omaha Tribe. Additionally, as a Q'anjob'al Maya cultural and spiritual leader, Luis leads Maya ceremony and maintains direct relationships with Maya ancestral authorities in Maya Territories. Luis is a true visionary and seeks to engage with people from around the world to share Maya cosmovision and knowledge so that our earth and global family can live in harmony.  

    About Leah Vinton (from https://www.pixanixim.org):
    Leah Vinton, MPA is a bilingual professional and motivated team player with over a decade of experience supporting for-impact organizations and causes with expertise in resource development for international and domestic organizations. Most recently, Leah has worked locally with the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska and Heritage Omaha, and has worked in Latin America with the Pan American Development Foundation and Mercado Global in fundraising and development roles. She lives in Omaha, NE.

    Communidad Maya Pixan Ixim
    Website: https://www.pixanixim.org/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/comunidadmaya
    Instagram: @pixanixim
    Youtube: pixanixim

    DONATE HERE: https://pixanixim.networkforgood.com/

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” by SHUNGU
    www.shungujazz.bandcamp.com
    “Balance” by Ki Oni
    “The Gypsy and the Fleeting Breath of Love” by Midnight Poncho
    “The Bulk of the Iceberg Lies Unseen, Beneath the Waterline Represents the Unconscious”
    By Ryan Chavira

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad

    Published on March 30, 2023

    • 53 min
    Why Nature Deserves a Voice

    Why Nature Deserves a Voice

    Episode 6: Why Nature Deserves a Voice - Elizabeth M Dunne, Esq. of Earth Law Center 

    In this episode, we speak with Elizabeth M Dunne, Director of Legal Advocacy at Earth Law Center, about her work advocating for nature within the legal system. We discuss the Rights of Nature Movement, reasons we should be challenging the idea of land ownership, and ways we can give nature a voice in our contracts and leases. 

    About Elizabeth Dunne (from www.earthlawcenter.org):

    Elizabeth brings 20 years of legal experience and a passion for designing legal frameworks that enable systemic change. She has advanced many of the groundbreaking Rights of Nature laws in the US and co-authored the US Chapter of the first Earth Law textbook - Zelle et al. (Eds.), Earth Law: Emerging Ecocentric Law—A Guide for Practitioners (Aspen Coursebook, Wolters Kluwer 2020). The story of her former client Grant Township’s fight against a frack waste injection well, based in part on the state constitutional right to a clean and healthy environment, is featured in the award winning documentary, Invisible Hand (www.invisiblehandfilm.com). She specializes in drafting laws for Tribal Nations, state and local governments, and ballot initiatives. Drawing on her experience as lead counsel in public interest class action lawsuits and as a law clerk to US federal District Court judges, Elizabeth is a leading practitioner in the development of litigation strategies that advance Earth Law. 

    Earth Law Center
    Website: www.earthlawcenter.org/
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/earthlawcenter
    Instagram: @earthlawcenter
    Youtube: @EarthLawCenter

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” by SHUNGU 
    “Ghosts” by Golden Brown

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers 
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad 

    Published on March 23, 2023

    • 46 min
    Rebuilding Intergenerational Land Ownership for Black Farmers

    Rebuilding Intergenerational Land Ownership for Black Farmers

    Episode Notes
    In the episode, we speak with Dr. Shakara Tyler, Board President of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network and co-founder of the Detroit Black Farmer Land Fund. We talk about ways the Detroit Black Farmer Land Fund is addressing historical and racial land ownership disparities, building food sovereignty, and revitalizing Detroit’s agricultural landscape. We discuss land justice as the foundation for social movements, the importance of building meaningful relationships, and the major transfer of wealth that has to happen to close the racial wealth gap and ensure everyone can thrive. 

    Detroit Black Farmer Land Fund
    Website: https://www.detroitblackfarmer.com
    Instagram: @detroitblackfarmerlandfund 
    Facebook: facebook.com/detroitblackfarmerlandfund
    DONATE: https://detroitblackfarmer.causevox.com/

    Detroit Black Community Food Security Network
    Website: https://www.dbcfsn.org
    Instagram: @detroitblackfoodsecurity 
    Facebook: facebook.com/DBCFSN
    DONATE: https://app.etapestry.com/onlineforms/DetroitBlackCommunityFoodSecu/donation.html

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” by SHUNGU, www.hotrecordsociete.bandcamp.com
    “Female Entities” by Ryan Chavira, www.ryanchavira.bandcamp.com
    “Infinite Iridescent Incidental” By Golden Brown, www.innerislands.bandcamp.com
    “Bardo” by Midnight Poncho, www.midnightponcho.bandcamp.com

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers 
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad 

    Published on March 9, 2023

    • 44 min
    Decommodifying Our Food System and Embracing The Commons

    Decommodifying Our Food System and Embracing The Commons

    Episode Notes
    In this episode, we speak with Molly Anderson, professor of food studies at Middlebury College in Vermont. We talk about what it means to hold land in the commons, the false narrative that industrial agriculture is feeding the world, and why decommodification is necessary if we want to transform our food system.

    About Molly Anderson (from https://www.middlebury.edu/college/people/molly-anderson):

    Molly Anderson directs the Academic Program in Food Studies at Middlebury College in Vermont and teaches on hunger and food security, fixing food systems, and sustainability.  She is involved in food system reform and planning at the local, state and regional scales; participates in the regional Food Solutions New England network and the national Inter-Institutional Network for Food, Agriculture & Sustainability. She is a member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems (IPES-Food) and was a Coordinating Lead Author on the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science & Technology for Development. She has worked as a private consultant for domestic and international organizations, with Oxfam America, and at Tufts University, where she was the founding Director of the Agriculture, Food and Environment Graduate Program.  Molly earned an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Systems Ecology from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a B.S. and M.S. in natural resource management and a certificate in Latin American Studies from Colorado State University.

    The music you heard in this episode:
    “But I will play” by SHUNGU 
    “Spring” by Midnight Poncho

    Hosted by Natalie Ashker Seevers 
    Produced by Natalie Ashker Seevers and Benjamin Seevers
    Mastered by Sean Conrad 

    Published on March 2, 2023

    • 40 min

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