Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Publication
    Digital food activism: Values, expertise and modes of action
    (Routledge, 2018-01-15)
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    ;
    ;
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    New information and communication technologies (ICTs) increasingly enable social action and civic organisation, on both local and global scales. Ranging from social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter, to mobile apps such as Buycott, and to data sharing wiki platforms and hacktivist projects, the activist landscape is rapidly shifting, collapsing geographic boundaries to form new issue publics and fast, sometimes mercurial, collective action. Within these emerging digital platforms for activism, food-related consumer action is gaining new contours and publics. Focusing on three case studies – a mobile app, a wiki platform, and an online-centric activist organization – we will examine how activist-ICT interactions generate new knowledges and practices in relation to consumer-based food activism. Specifically, we will critically analyse how consumer activists and social entrepreneurs use ICTs to facilitate new or alternative forms of engagement with food, and how ICTs, in turn, shape possibilities for action. Bridging anthropology and science and technology studies, the chapter will develop new understandings of alternative food networks, social movements, activist leadership, and expertise in the digital age.
  • Publication
    Introduction - Digital food activism: Food transparency one bite/byte at a time?
    (Routledge, 2018-01-18) ;
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    ;
    ;
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    This introductory chapter considers food activism within contemporary ‘digital food cultures’. Based on a review of the literature on food activism and digital activism, we introduce the concept of digital food activism, which we have developed to capture diverse forms of digitally mediated practices of food activism, their distinctiveness and their constitutive effects. We situate these practices within the larger multidisciplinary literature on digital devices, platforms and infrastructures, focusing on the affordances of digital platforms; here, our aim is to explore the kinds of interactions these platforms enable and constrain, and what this means for digital food activism. Building on our own research on digital food activism, which focuses on three case studies – a mobile app, a wiki platform, and an online-centric activist organization - we consider digital platforms used for food activism as ‘infrastructures that give rise to ontological experiments’ (Jensen and Morita, 2015) and call attention to how food is ontologically respecified in the entanglements of diverse types of activists and digital platforms. We illustrate this ontological respecification through an analysis of an auto-ethnographic episode that describes the encounter and entanglement between a researcher-consumer, barcode scanner app, supermarket, water bottle, multi-national corporation, Swiss mountain valley, crowd-sourced database, food-centred campaign and blog post. To conclude, we discuss the implications of this ontological respecification for agency, democracy and economy, and elucidate the similarities and differences between ‘traditional’ food activism (Counihan and Siniscalchi, 2014) and digital food activism.
  • Publication
    Digital food activism: power, knowledge, and consumer action
    ( 2016-07-23)
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    ;
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    New information and communication technologies (ICTs) increasingly enable social action and civic organisation, on both local and global scales. Ranging from social media platforms to mobile apps, data sharing wiki platforms, and hacktivist projects, the activist landscape is rapidly shifting, collapsing geographic boundaries to invoke social and ethical values on a transnational scale, and form new issue publics with fast, sometimes mercurial, collective action. Within these emerging digital platforms for activism, food-related consumer action is gaining new contours and publics. In this paper, we explore the emerging field of digital food activism. Digital food activism does not simply refer to food activism that occurs on digital media. Rather, it encompasses forms of food activism enabled and shaped by and through digital media platforms, with the medium as an integral part of the activist project. Focusing on three case studies - a mobile app, a wiki platform, and an online-centric activist organisation - we examine how activist-ICT interactions generate new knowledges and practices in relation to consumer-based food activism. With particular emphasis on the social and ethical values implicated in ICT-enabled food activism, we critically analyse how European consumers and social entrepreneurs use ICTs to facilitate new forms of engagement with food, and how ICTs, in turn, shape possibilities for action. Bridging anthropology and science and technology studies, our analysis develops new understandings of alternative food networks, social movements, political consumerism, and expertise in the digital age.
  • Publication
    Governance by campaign : The co-constitution of food issues, publics and expertise through new information and communication technologies
    (Routledge, 2017-08-23) ;
    Eli, Karin
    ;
    McLennan, Amy
    ;
    Dolan, Catherine
    ;
    Lezaun, Javier
    ;
    Ulijaszek, Stanley
    This paper considers food as a site of public engagement with science and technology. Specifically, we focus on how public engagement with food is envisioned and operationalised by one non-profit organisation, foodwatch. Founded in Germany in 2002, foodwatch extensively uses new information and communication technologies to inform consumers about problematic food industry practices. In this paper, we present our analysis of 50 foodwatch e-newsletters published over a period of one year (2013). We define foodwatch’s approach as ‘governance by campaign’ – an approach marked by simultaneously constituting: (a) key food governance issues, (b) affective publics that address these topics of governance through ICT-enabled media and (c) independent food and food-related expertise. We conclude our paper with a discussion of foodwatch’s mode of ‘governance by campaign’ and the democratic limits and potentials of a governance mode that is based on invited participation.
    Type:
    Journal:
    Issue:
    Scopus© Citations 17