Citizen science and stakeholders involvement
Metztli hernandezCITIZEN SCIENCE
Epistemic negotiation
Stakeholders (indigenous groups, activist, scientist, scholars, etc)
CITIZEN SCIENCE
Epistemic negotiation
Stakeholders (indigenous groups, activist, scientist, scholars, etc)
Indigenous farmers - creating food forests that focus on native crops (though they do include non-natives that serve a purpose or simply taste good) and fostering biodiversity/sustainability, also support Hawaii's ability to be self-sufficient (85-95% of food is imported) and the return of native species of animals
Japanese farmworkers - first arrived in 1860s, particularly influential in coffee industry
Filipino farmworkers - 6,000 arrive in 1946
International Longshore and Warehouse Union - includes sugar plantation workers - 1946 28,000 workers strike; again in 1958, 1974 (pineapple workers strike 1947, 1968, 1974)
Agrochemical transnational companies, e.g. Monsanto, Pioneer, Novartis, Cargill - environmental destruction, disregard for regulations on use and disposal of hazardous chemicals, off-site releases of hazardous chemicals from Maui research facility, political lobbying against regulations for GMOs and pesticides
Historic stakeholders - cattle ranchers, monocrop plantations - less common today but their effects on the environment are still very visible
Tourism - economic control
Beyond Pesticides - national organization with programs in Hawaii
Maui County Department of Agriculture - newly created to invest in food sovereignty, help move the island away from monocrop pasts by rehabilitating the environment and creating jobs
Sources:
https://grist.org/agriculture/the-farmers-restoring-hawaiis-ancient-foo…
https://www.mauinews.com/opinion/columns/2022/03/changes-to-agricultura…
https://hdoa.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HISTORY-OF-AGRICULTU…
Significant pesticide usage from industrial agriculture:
Runoff from agriculture (even if it contains just sediments and no pesticides) is harmful to coral reefs
Sources:
https://grist.org/agriculture/the-farmers-restoring-hawaiis-ancient-foo…
https://www.hawaii.edu/news/2017/03/02/cooperation-is-key-to-reduce-sed…
I want to build my familiarity with a wide variety of different cases (in the room right now, we have people with expertise on: Austin, Louisiana, London, Orange County/Santa Ana, La Puente, and Delhi, among others) and my ability to think about how these cases can give insight on the places I am interested in.
Some residents of flooded homes in Three Rivers/Woodlake blame new housing developments that replaced orchards and a creek bed for recent flooding
Farmers drove pickup trucks loaded with dirt into a breached levee, then covered the trucks with dirt
Schools and colleges have stepped up to provide skilled manufacturing training
Fresno County offers employee training through the New Employment Opportunity program, which reimburses companies that hire through the program
Economic leaders/local government: bringing in diverse occupations and companies to the valley, including a medical complex in Clovis, which will house the first medical school in the valley
Industry: not enough highly skilled workers
Schools: not enough students going into high-paying jobs
Increasing jobs in Central Valley from large corporate warehouses, but those don't always come with high wages, can be dangerous
45% of Fresno Unified School District students take part in career and technical programs - better graduation rate, offers students work experience and skills