Assembly 2010

Food Secure Canada's Biennial Assembly

will be held at the University of Montreal, November 26-28, 2010. The conference will be interpreted in English and French. The theme is:

  Weaving together food policy and community action : an agenda for change

  Tisser un agenda pour une politique alimentaire : nourrir nos actions

  • The program will be finalized by September.
  • Registrations will open September 15th. The registration fee for members of Food Secure Canada is $200 before October 15th; after that date the fee will be $250.
    For non-members of Food Secure Canada, the 'early-bird' registration fee is $260 before October 15th; after that date the fee will be $310. The fee covers all plenary sessions and workshops and the following meals: a light supper on Friday; breakfast, lunch and snacks on both Saturday and Sunday.
  • Sponsors are needed to support the Assembly and scholarships for front-line and remote food activists - please consider how your organization or business can help in this way.  Download our sponsorship package.

Assembly 2010 Program Outline -- Université de Montréal, Nov. 26-28

Weaving Together Food Policy and Community Action : an agenda for change


The Assembly will begin with a keynote panel on Friday, November 26, focusing on the 'big picture' around food, energy, and climate change, with a panel of speakers from the 'global South' and Canada. The speakers will unveil the international corporate agenda and discuss the responses from small farmers and social movements against land grabs and the degeneration of agriculture into the production of biomass for whatever industrial purpose is currently convenient. This discussion will be placed in the context of the movement for Food Sovereignty.

From Saturday morning, November 27, to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, November 28, there will be a series of workshops and presentations addressing two interlinked themes:

1. Weaving An Agenda: Food Sovereignty policy for Canada

The Assembly will feature the policy proposals from the People's Food Policy Project, providing an introduction to the whole policy document in the initial plenary session, and one workshop on each of the ten policy papers, with the aim of ensuring full discussion of the proposals and building a base for advocacy

2. Nourishing Our Actions: Food Sovereignty in practice

Workshops, plenary sessions, panel discussions, roundtables, and other sessions (including film and posters) will encourage people engaged in creating food sovereignty on the ground in Canada to share their experiences and insights. In particular, the Assembly will highlight the work of food activists in Québec and make links between the work in Québec and the rest of Canada. It will also focus on making links across sectors and areas of practice in creating food sovereignty, through initiatives which encourage a local food economy, support small-scale and ecological food providers, ensure sustainable livelihoods in the food system, increase access of Indigenous peoples to their traditional food sources, promote independent seed saving and breeding, facilitate sharing of traditional knowledge and research which is built on a variety of ways of knowing, respect and encourage community sharing of food and cultures.

In addition to the workshops focusing on the People's Food Policy, there will be approximately 20 other workshop spaces of approximately 1 hour 20 minutes each. Members of FSC and Québec partners are encouraged to submit workshop proposals dealing with the above themes and related topics. Interactive formats are preferred, but the standard presentation /discussion format is acceptable. The final program will be decided by the Program Committee which includes members from Food Secure Canada Steering Committee and conference partners from Québec organizations.

 

The deadline for proposals is June 14th, 2010; final program announcement September 15th.