Every Bite Counts: Exploring Food Justice in the Classroom

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Today’s featured blogger is Holly Bauer, author of Food Matters: A Bedford Spotlight Reader.

Food is an essential part of society. Food sustains us. Food provides our bodies with the nutrients and energy needed to stay alive and healthy. Food unites us. Whether it’s a late-night tub of ice cream with a friend or a holiday gathering, food allows us to connect with our family, friends, and even community. Food distinguishes us. Our diets portray our cultural background, identity, and racial history. And most shockingly, food divides us. Although food is integral to our livelihood, millions of people across the United States and the world do not have equitable access to healthy food. That said, how do we motivate students to care about it? The fourth edition of Food Matters offers several ways to connect students’ lived experiences to the larger social, cultural, political, and ethical realities that affect food consumption and production. Here are some potential ways to make food justice relevant to students:

 

Make it personal

I find that students enjoy writing about food choices when they can relate their personal experiences to the broader academic questions posed by the readings. This edition features readings from Jill McCorkle and Lily Wong, who take a closer look at how their food choices reflect their identity and values. Using these readings as model texts, you can ask students to explore why they eat what they eat, how it reinforces their sense of self, and how they would be impacted if they did not have access to these foods. 

 

Make it local

Connecting issues raised by the readings to local food issues can help students understand the larger debates and complexities around food justice initiatives. You can ask students to examine campus resources, such as a basic needs hub, campus dining options, and food-based clubs or organizations. They can also research food-related organizations or projects in the neighboring communities, such as food banks, community gardens, indigenous food projects, or community groups focused on shared food values. Using Kathlyn Yee’s piece about black food co-ops in Ohio as a model, students can highlight the work these organizations do and analyze why they are needed.

 

Make it political, economic, historical, or cultural

While eating is a shared human experience, many people give little thought to the broader implications of their food choices or the political and socioeconomic systems shaping those choices. Food choices are inevitably connected to nutritional science, agriculture, and cultural practices. They also say something about our values and the principles we live by. The readings in Food Matters suggest that we have a range of moral obligations and responsibilities related to food. Examining the political, economic, historical, and cultural aspects of food production and consumption helps us understand our moral obligations to other people and communities. Various writers, such as Bennet Goldstein, Ligaya Mishan, Katherine Wu, and S.E. Smith, offer ways to help students use a food justice lens to analyze our food system. Is access to enough healthy, nutritious, and culturally appropriate food a human right? How is food justice connected to other social issues, such as racial justice, environmental justice, and sustainability movements?

 

Make it global

While everyone has a relationship with food and a vested interest in the current and future food supply, writing about food can also help students explore global questions and problems. How do we justify food waste and overconsumption when other parts of the world have food shortages and malnutrition? If we have the capacity to feed everyone, are we obligated to feed the world? Reading articles by Chad Frischmann and Mamta Mehra, Chidinma Iwu, and Lela Nargi can provide students with a framework for analyzing our food infrastructure and understanding its global reach. 

The fourth edition of Food Matters is filled with readings about food justice that can be used to promote meaningful discourse about how our food infrastructure disenfranchises marginalized communities. Connecting students to food justice initiatives not only creates awareness, but it can also foster agency to make better food choices and/or advocate for better access. We all play a role in our food infrastructure, and if we want to see a change, we must acknowledge that every bite counts.

2 Comments
Edward357J
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor

Food is a vital part of society, sustaining and connecting us through shared experiences. It reflects our cultural background and identity. Despite its importance, many people lack access to healthy food. To motivate my learning oneonta students to care about food justice, connect their experiences to broader social and ethical issues. Engage them with personal stories, field trips, interactive projects, and multimedia resources. Integrate food justice into the curriculum and offer service-learning opportunities to inspire advocacy for equitable access to nutritious food. 

timsalt
New Contributor
New Contributor

Food justice is such an important topic, and making it personal, local, and global really helps students engage with it. I’ve found that exploring different food cultures also opens up great discussions—how access, tradition, and sustainability shape what we eat. Sites like https://yiouyi.co/ offer unique insights into global food trends, making it easier to see the bigger picture of how food connects and divides us.