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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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We Feed the World explored the extraordinary stories of 50 communities around the world, featuring small-scale farmers and fishers from across the globe who are using regenerative techniques to nurture biocultural diversity. Launched in 2018, We Feed the World brought the efforts of these individuals and communities to light in the context of current challenges
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Why we must celebrate the ingenuity, resilience and wisdom of small-holder farming communities now more than ever, as the damaging agenda for lab-grown foods gains pace. The community of Puerto Colombia lies on the Tiquié River in Vaupés, one of the most remote regions of the Colombian Amazon. The six families who live here thrive
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We’re delighted to announce that on Friday 5th November We Feed the World will be open to audiences in Glasgow for the COP26 Climate Conference. A selection of prints from the original exhibition is going on display at Mcleod Hall in the Pearce Institute (840-860 Govan Rd, Govan, Glasgow G51 3UU). The Pearce Institute will play
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Rooted in the success of the 2018, We Feed The World campaign, We Feed The UK weaves together the arts and environment, to re-story regenerative farmers as custodians of Britain’s biocultural diversity. Launching in 2024 at Liverpool’s Open Eye Gallery, during the 2023 harvest season we gave the country a taste of what’s to come with
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We Feed the World photos that were gifted to the community of San Isidro have been been touring some amazingly strong and resilient Mexican communities and events, accompanied by Gaia’s Thomas Takezoe. The community of San Isidro who participated in the project and our partner, Collective For Autonomy (COA – who accompany many Mexican communities
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Community Exhibitions of We Feed the World Open Across Six Continents After the huge success of the We Feed the World exhibition at the Bargehouse in London, we have been receiving photos from all the farming communities who participated in the project. From Moray in Scotland to Panay Island in the Philippines, farmers and communities
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Hundreds of farmers and food activists from all over the country were joined by celebrity supporters on a Good Food March through central London on Sunday 14th October. Driving tractors, and bearing placards that demanded support for small scale farmers, over five hundred people marched and drove from Parliament Square to the Bargehouse Gallery

