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List of contents
PART I: Introduction 1. Contested Sustainability Discourses in the Agrifood System: An Overview PART II: Framing the Contested Discourse 2. Sustainable Intensification: Agroecological Appropriation or Contestation? 3. Sustainable Intensification as a Sociotechnical Imaginary 4. Agrifood Discourses and Feeding the World: Unpacking Sustainable Intensification 5. Sustainability as the Civil Commons: Laying the Groundwork for Sustainable Agriculture Part III: Contested Discourses in Theory and Practice 6. Zero Hunger Discourse: Neoliberal, Progressive, Reformist or Radical? 7. Greenwashing the Animal-industrial Complex: Sustainable Intensification and the Livestock Revolution 8. Are Food Quality Schemes an Alternative to the Conventional Food System? Reflections on the EU Metaphors on Agrifood Quality Regulation 9. Discourses on Sustainability in the French Farming Sector: The Redefinition of a Consensual and Knowledge-intensive "Agroecology" 10. Dueling Discourses of Sustainability: Neo-Conventional and Organic Farming on the Canadian Prairies 11. Contested Sustainability Discourses as Lived Experience: Conflicted Feelings Towards Meat in Consumers’ Narratives and Life Stories Part IV: Contested Agrifood Governance 12. Shifting Visions of Sustainability in the United States Agriculture: A Case Study of the Role of Multi-Stakeholder Governance 13. Understanding the Challenge of Problem Definition in Multistakeholder Initiatives: Lessons from Sustainability Policy Frames in Canadian Non-State Food Strategies 14. Standardizing "Unused" Land: The Politics of Indicators in Land Classification 15. Justifying the Standardization of Sustainability Impact Part V: Conclusion 16. Fault Lines in Sustainability: Contestation, Cooptation, Reform, and Transformation
About the author
Douglas H. Constance is Professor of Sociology at Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas, USA.
Jason T. Konefal is Associate Professor of Sociology, at Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas, USA.
Maki Hatanaka is Associate Professor of Sociology at Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas, USA.
Summary
This book documents and engages competing visions and contested discourses of agrifood sustainability, from the incremental/reformist to transformation/radical continuum for alternative agrifood movements, particularly agroecology and sustainable intensification, with case studies from around the world.