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By: TABLEdebates.org
  • Summary

  • Is a local or global food system more sustainable? How big should a farm be? Debates about the future of food have become more polarised than ever. We will explore the evidence, worldviews, and values that people bring to global food system debates. Our show will be in conversation with those who are trying to transform the food system, as part of the ongoing work of Table, a collaboration between the University of Oxford, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), and Wageningen University. This podcast is operated by SLU. For more info, visit https://tabledebates.org/podcast/
    © 2024 Feed
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Episodes
  • Does CRISPR make our food unnatural?
    May 2 2024

    If more and more gene-edited foods become common on our plates, is that a sign of a promising or worrying food future? With Dr. Lauren Crossland-Marr, food anthropologist and host of the podcast A CRISPR Bite, we unpack whether it’s fair to call CRISPR a natural way of "speeding up the breeding" process, whether technological innovations such as gene editing are addressing root causes of food systems challenges, and if there’s space for middle ground on such a polarizing issue.

    For more info and resources, visit: https://tabledebates.org/podcast/episode61

    Guests

    • Lauren Crossland-Marr, Assistant Professor at the University of La Verne

    Resources

    • First Fruit by Belinda Martineau
    • Channa Prakash on GMs, Golden Rice and the Green Revolution

    Episode edited and produced by Matthew Kessler. Music by Blue dot sessions.



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    30 mins
  • What's a natural diet? (with Richard Tellström)
    Apr 25 2024

    hat influences the meals we enjoy today? Meal historian and cultural researcher Richard Tellström from Stockholm University suggests that the surrounding natural environments and ecosystems only play a minimal role. Instead, he argues that our choices are primarily shaped by cultural, political and economic forces. This episode dives into the dramatic shifts in Swedish diets over the past century, highlighting how changes such as new food preservation methods in the 1970s, Sweden's entry into the European Union in the 1990s, and shifting cultural trends throughout have redefined what's fashionable, and therefore possible, to eat.

    This is the second installment of a two-part series, following our first episode with archaeological chemist Amy Styring who investigates what our ancestors ate during periods of significant societal transitions. Listen to Part 1.

    For more info and resources, visit: https://tabledebates.org/podcast/episode60

    Guests

    • Richard Tellström, Associate Professor at Stockholm University

    Episode edited and produced by Matthew Kessler. Music by Blue dot sessions.

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    19 mins
  • What's a natural diet? (with Amy Styring)
    Apr 18 2024

    Around 6000 years ago in Northwest Europe, our ancestors transitioned from hunter-gatherer societies to sedentary farming. How did their diets change during this time? The field of archaeological sciences and chemistry teamed up to shed new light on this question.

    In this episode, we ask Amy Styring, archaeological chemist at the University of Oxford, what's her take on a natural diet, whether we overestimate the role of meat in our past diets, and what lessons can we learn today if we have a better understanding of how people produced and ate food in the past?

    This is the first of a two-part series. Next week we hear from a meal historian on the role culture plays in informing what we eat.

    For more info and resources, visit: https://tabledebates.org/podcast/episode59

    Guests

    • Amy Styring, Associate Professor at the University of Oxford

    Episode edited and produced by Matthew Kessler. Music by Blue dot sessions.

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    26 mins

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