Mid-Maine Global Forum on Soils Based Economies

2015 Oak Human Rights Fellow:

Jodi Koberinski

 Soils Based Economies and the Future of Food in Celebration of the 2015 United Nations Year of Soils

Waterville Public Library 

Thursday, November 12 Noon

The Oak Institute for the Study of International Human Rights at Colby College is pleased to announce the selection of Jodi Koberinski of Canada as our 2015 Oak Fellow. Koberinski’s pioneering work reimagining agriculture and advocating for more equitable food systems, not only in Canada but also around the world, puts her at the forefront in the field of food sovereignty, the theme for this year’s Oak fellowship.

Koberinski is launching the Beyond Pesticides Network to transform Canada’s food systems. Professionally, this represents a bold move. Not so long ago Koberinski was an entrepreneur operating a café and a small-scale food processing project. Then she spent six years as the executive director of the Organic Council of Ontario, working to create change from within the corporate-industrial food complex. Now she is a frontline activist who supports farm families, rural communities, and those living in poverty in their fight for food sovereignty.

Although Koberinski hails from a country that has earned a global reputation as a champion of human rights, she says she feels increasingly vulnerable in Canada. For one thing, this outspoken critic of industrial food production says powerful agribusiness interests that benefit from the status quo are ever more vigilant in their efforts to discredit her. For another, she believes Ottawa has grown hostile to activists like herself.

In recent years Voices-Voix, a network of Canadian civil society organizations, has documented what it calls “the shrinking democratic space for dialogue on public policy and for dissent” in Canada. In a 2013 report it claimed that environmental groups, in particular, are being “systematically silenced” by the government. A researcher at Queen’s University in Ontario believes that Canada is gripped by a “green scare,” and that federal agencies routinely spy on such organizations—a claim denied by law enforcement.

Koberinski, who calls herself a “town crier,” comes to Colby College as the political environment grows increasingly fractious back home. She will arrive in late August and spend the fall semester here, leading a human rights seminar on food systems, consulting with members of the campus and Maine communities, and building the Beyond Pesticides Network.

At the moment, Koberinski is working without pay, relying on crowdsourcing to finance her grassroots campaign. She is known as an unflagging source of innovation, an activist who tirelessly helps others and furthers the cause of food sovereignty. She is a global leader on this issue and is recognized for her vital work transforming—not just reforming—agriculture to provide sustainable, safe, and secure food systems around the world.

 

Please Register by Email: bsammons829@gmail.com or by telephone: Bonnie Sammons at 716-1022

Lunch catered by Jorgensen’s for $10 - Please pay at the door.

Please register for this Thursday lunch program no later than Tuesday November 10

Please indicate your lunch choice:   Sandwiches:  Turkey/swiss on wheat, Curried chicken salad wrap, Veggie havarti pesto on spinach wrap.  Lunch includes your choice of sandwich, soup, cookie, coffee or tea.

Please note: Registrants who request lunch are responsible for lunch fees.  If your plans change and you are unable to attend, please notify us so that lunch orders can be adjusted.

 

Mid-Maine Global Forum is pleased to offer this program at:

12:00 Noon, November 12

Waterville Public Library

For more information on the Mid-Maine Global Forum visit: http://www.midmaineglobalforum.org

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