black farmers
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Photo by Joshua Lanzarini on Unsplash
Food justice advocates didn't set out to save the climate. Their solutions are doing it anyway
How New York's rich history of urban gardening connects food justice and climate mitigation.
Newsletter
Image by Bishnu Sarangi from Pixabay
In the face of climate change, Southern Black farmers plant rice
Minority and small farmers don't always have the luxury to move from flood-prone land. Could rice be the key to their survival?
For one historically Black California town, a century of water access denied
As the Central Valley became an agricultural powerhouse, Black migrants flocked to it for a piece of the California dream. But more established local farmers, almost all of whom were white, sought to control as much of the state’s water as possible.
The Field Report: Tom Vilsack on how the USDA can transform the food system
We sat down with the Secretary of Agriculture to learn about the agency’s priorities around nutrition security, climate action, and equity.
Tracing regenerative farming to its Indigenous roots
In her new book, Liz Carlisle shows that carbon can be stored in the soil if we adopt ancestral land management strategies, many of which are held by communities of color.
Black farmers are rebuilding agriculture in coal country
Jason Tartt saw opportunity in the terraced hillsides of his native West Virginia, both for restoring the land and for other Black farmers.
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How gleaning could reshape the farm economy
A Vermont nonprofit is connecting independent farms with buyers and distributors, reducing food surplus and working to eliminate food insecurity.
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