“Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga

Recently the farlands of Oceania have entered a food security global discourse because of the climate change threat to food security. In the Kingdom of Tonga, such threat has promoted a large number of projects, often through female participation, imposing outsider values of food and reinforcing the...

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Main Author: Gaia Cottino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ledizioni 2018-03-01
Series:Antropologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1386
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author Gaia Cottino
author_facet Gaia Cottino
author_sort Gaia Cottino
collection DOAJ
description Recently the farlands of Oceania have entered a food security global discourse because of the climate change threat to food security. In the Kingdom of Tonga, such threat has promoted a large number of projects, often through female participation, imposing outsider values of food and reinforcing the nexus of gender and nature. This imposition on an indigenous system that embodies figuratively and literally the values of food, tackles the population’s food sovereignty, whose wellbeing is linked to land rights and access to food. By illustrating the core values of food throughout the Oceania cultural setting and the changing foodscape, land system and bodyscape, in which size and resources have a discursive interaction, I will discuss ethnographic data regarding a recent “urban horticulture” project aimed at building local food security, healthy eating and women empowerment. I will also question to which extent a “glocal” agenda, rather than a new rights framework for food and nature, can guarantee food sovereignty and the population wellbeing.
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spelling doaj-art-b838ad77b3494e5cbbe2123f539da13d2025-07-19T17:51:26ZengLedizioniAntropologia2281-40432420-84692018-03-0151 N.S.10.14672/ada2018138641-571080“Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of TongaGaia CottinoRecently the farlands of Oceania have entered a food security global discourse because of the climate change threat to food security. In the Kingdom of Tonga, such threat has promoted a large number of projects, often through female participation, imposing outsider values of food and reinforcing the nexus of gender and nature. This imposition on an indigenous system that embodies figuratively and literally the values of food, tackles the population’s food sovereignty, whose wellbeing is linked to land rights and access to food. By illustrating the core values of food throughout the Oceania cultural setting and the changing foodscape, land system and bodyscape, in which size and resources have a discursive interaction, I will discuss ethnographic data regarding a recent “urban horticulture” project aimed at building local food security, healthy eating and women empowerment. I will also question to which extent a “glocal” agenda, rather than a new rights framework for food and nature, can guarantee food sovereignty and the population wellbeing.https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1386GenderFoodBodyAgricultural practicesFood sovereignty
spellingShingle Gaia Cottino
“Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
Antropologia
Gender
Food
Body
Agricultural practices
Food sovereignty
title “Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
title_full “Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
title_fullStr “Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
title_full_unstemmed “Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
title_short “Men are interested only in root crops”. Food security gendered policies in the Kingdom of Tonga
title_sort men are interested only in root crops food security gendered policies in the kingdom of tonga
topic Gender
Food
Body
Agricultural practices
Food sovereignty
url https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1386
work_keys_str_mv AT gaiacottino menareinterestedonlyinrootcropsfoodsecuritygenderedpoliciesinthekingdomoftonga