Giving Compass' Take:
- Alicia Esquivel explores the transformative potential of Indigenous-led global food systems reform to protect biodiversity and restore soil health.
- How can philanthropy support intercultural knowledge co-creation for sustainable food systems? What might it look like to consider food not as a commodity but as a part of the environment to be stewarded?
- Search for a nonprofit focused on Indigenous food sovereignty.
- Access more nonprofit data, advanced filters, and comparison tools when you upgrade to Giving Compass Pro.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Recent research out of Universidad Intercultural Maya suggests that food systems sustainability requires the integration of Indigenous knowledge bases. The authors argue that agroecology and regenerative agriculture can only succeed when paired with intercultural knowledge co-creation, advocating for Indigenous-led global food systems transformation.
“Interculturality is the result of a process in which different ways of knowing interact in a safe space, allowing condition for co-creation of new knowledge, knowledge that reflects the different cosmovisions from each of the cultures participating in the process,” lead author of the publication, Dr. Francisco Rosado-May of Universidad Intercultural Maya tells Food Tank.
To increase the probability of long-term success of food systems transformation, the researchers worked to uncover Indigenous perceptions on food systems to move toward a process of intercultural knowledge co-creation.
“Indigenous Peoples do have the notion of the concept of food systems, but have a different take,” Dr. Rosado-May tells Food Tank. While commonly used definitions of “food systems” consider food as a commodity, “Indigenous Peoples consider food as a part of their natural environment,” he says.
According to the study, Yucatec Maya farmers in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo face the same challenges as non-Indigenous farmers worldwide including the climate crisis, loss of biodiversity, poor yields, and loss of soil fertility.
Several state funded programs have been implemented to support producers in Quintana Roo. According to the study, two primary approaches—one based on agroecology and the other on regenerative agriculture—overlook participatory processes. The researchers say these approaches have failed to yield positive agricultural results because they focus on an incomplete understanding of food systems and ignore an Indigenous perspective.
Rosado-May tells Food Tank that Indigenous Peoples’ food systems contain a “diversity of subsystems” including ones that exist outside of a market, and that this definition differs from the formal definition of food systems currently used by the U.N. Food Systems Summit. This shift in understanding how the food system is conceptualized by people in different ways is the key to moving towards food systems transformation.
Read the full article about Indigenous-led global food systems reform by Alicia Esquivel at Food Tank.