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Articles

A quiet revolution? Beneath the surface of Ireland's alternative food initiatives

Pages 149-159
Published online: 21 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

Getting food to our plates has become a highly complex, industrialised and globalised process. However, transformations in how our food is supplied are not without resistance. Initiatives are emerging that take a step back to simpler, alternative methods of food supply, bringing the producer and consumer closer together. Alternative food initiatives which are commonly found in Ireland include allotments, community gardens, farmers' markets, farm shops and on-farm food enterprises. Understanding alternative food activities as a social movement can illuminate a fresh perspective on their nature and potential. While briefly considering the broad dynamics of alternative food activity in Ireland, this exploratory paper looks at the question of the nature of resistance and whether a collective vision may exist across initiatives, illustrated by two examples, a community garden and consumer food co-op. Finally some conclusions as to how alternative food initiatives may play a transformative role within the contemporary food system are discussed.

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the South Circular Road Community Garden and the Dublin Food Co-op members, my PhD supervisors Michael Ward and Robert Briscoe. Thanks also to Colin Sage and three anonymous referees for their constructive comments on earlier drafts of this article. This research is supported by a scholarship from the Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences.

Notes

1. This article is part of the preliminary stages of research for a PhD on Ireland's alternative food sector. Instead of focusing on specific case studies, the overall study attempts to move beyond this approach. The two case studies focused on here were chosen to begin to engage with social movement theory that could feed into the study in its later stages. A database cataloguing information on initiatives in Ireland was constructed, from which four area-based comparisons were selected. The four areas are where the bulk of empirical data for the study was collected, which is composed of narratives, participant observation and semi-structured interviews.

2. Grow it Yourself (GIY) Ireland is a national not for profit organisation which aims to inspire people to grow food and develop food growing skills. Nationally, a network of 70 local groups exists, with each group meeting monthly.

 

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