Description
Book Synopsis Local, diverse and resilient – the new culture of food
Long embraced by corporations who are driven only by the desire for profit, industrial agriculture wastes precious resources and spews millions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere each year, exacerbating climate change and threatening the very earth and water on which we depend. However, this dominant system, from which Americans obtain most of their food, is being slowly supplanted by a new paradigm.
The Emergent Agriculture is a collection of fourteen thematic essays on sustainability viewed through the lens of farming. Arguing that industrial food production is incompatible with the realities of nature, science, and ethics, this lyrical narrative makes the case for a locally based food system which is:
- Stable in the face of economic uncertainty
- Resilient in the face of environmental variability
- Grounded in stewardship of the land, on a
Trade Review
Tipping points in food and farming are obvious to anyone courageous enough to look. This highly readable treatise explains the healing future awaiting us. Let's learn, embrace, and move forward. This book describes the future perfectly. ---Joel Salatin, Polyface Farm Here's the inside story on the most hopeful development in American culture in recent years. As local food systems grow and intertwine, they form a subversive challenge to the too-big-to-fail agriculture we've somehow come to accept as normal. ---Bill McKibben, author, Deep Economy In The Emergent Agriculture, Gary Kleppel leverages his extensive experience as an ecologist, teacher and farmer for an honest, sound and accessible examination of the often hidden costs of our current industrial agro-food system and the rise of one based on ethics, ecology and community replacing it. ---Sean Clark, farm director and agricultural ecologist, Berea College, Kentucky Dr. Kleppel makes an eloquent and well-researched case for supporting agricultural production that is community-based, appropriately scaled to local resources, nutritionally rich, and ethical. The content evokes Wendell Berry and Michael Pollan, but with many fresh insights about the enriched food systems that are sprouting from the ground up across the globe. ---Marianne Sarrantonio, associate professor of sustainable agriculture, University of Maine
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Introduction — On the Cusp of a Revolution
I. Farming: An Emerging Paradigm
1. A New Approach to Agriculture
2. The Paradox of Agriculture
3. Farm Subsidies
II. Sustainability
4. Toward a Sustainable Agriculture
5. Sustainable Meat — A Contradiction in Terms?
6. Diversity in Agriculture
7. Energy and the Future of Farming
8. The New Normal
III. The Local Economy
9. The Emergent Market
10. The Consumer in a Changing Food System
11. Slow Money
12. CSA
13. Scaling Up — How Local Farms Will Feed America
IV. Conclusion
14. The Emergent Agriculture
Endnotes
Index
About the Author