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BRISBANE:

Launch of Griffith REVIEW
Edition 27: Food Chain
Thursday 25 February, 6pm
Mondo Organics, 166 Hardgrave Rd, West End

Deepen the Conversation:
Food Chain

Thursday 11 March, 6pm
SLQ Auditorium 1, Level 2, State Library of Queensland


MELBOURNE:

Third Writers at the Convent
Australian Food Security: In conversation with Julianne Schultz and Margaret Simons
Sunday 14 February, 12pm
The Community Room, Abbotsford Convent, 1 St Heliers Street, Abbotsford

Third Writers at the Convent
Ethical Shopping: In conversation with Paul Mitchell, Nick Ray and Alan Attwood
Sunday 14 February, 2pm
The Linen Room, Abbotsford Convent, 1 St Heliers Street, Abbotsford


SYDNEY:

Save the Date!
Wednesday Lunch at Lowy
Food Security in the Globalised World
Wednesday 24 February, 12.30pm
The Lowy Institute for International Policy, Sydney

Griffith REVIEW Audio

Edition 27: Food Chain
on ABC Radio National
and FBi Radio 94.5FM

Romana Koval chats with authors Nick Earls and Donna Lee Brien about their articles and the challenges of food production at home and overseas and our complex social and cultural relationship to what we eat.

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Listen to the podcast HERE.


nguyen_pauline_vertical_crop.gifMatt Levinson, host of CANVAS on FBi Radio 94.5FM recently chatted with restaurant proprietor and author, Pauline Nguyen about her work and origins as an writer, and how her experience has shaped her writing.

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Listen to the podcast HERE.


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Listen to other
Griffith REVIEW
Podcasts
HERE

Writers include:
Frank Moorhouse
Murray Sayle
Robyn Williams
Ian Lowe
Jeff McMullen
Chris Sarra

Edition 27: Food Chain

open_quote.jpgWe are what we eat, and in an era of global warming, food is the canary in the mine.

Food prices are rising, droughts and storms are affecting farmers and the global model of food production is under challenge. close_quote.jpg


Edition 26 cover


Food Chain
explores the dimension
of this looming problem, and our
complex relationship with the food
we eat and the food we drool over.

The source, supply and price of food
is likely to change significantly.
Policies to reduce the impact of
climate change will have a profound
impact on the food supply here and
around the world.

Food is particularly vulnerable to
global warming. Droughts, storms,
pestilence and the increasing cost
of fuel are already taking a toll
on the reliable supply of
affordable food.

Food Chain will range widely across the whole food chain from farm gate to supermarket shelves with a national and global perspective. It will bring the abstract discussion of global warming to the dinner table and bring it to life with new urgency and immediacy.

In a stimulating lead essay Margaret Simons explores the complexity of the Murray Darling river crisis and its impact on the security of Australia's food bowl.

This essay will provide a new framework to thinking about sustainable food production and contemporary policy debates on food security. Ranging from the farm to the fridge, this essay will change the way you think about what you put in your mouth.

This issue promises to be an agenda setting contribution to the most urgent discussion in Australia at the beginning of 2010: what is to be done about climate change and how it will affect us all.

>> Read more about Edition 27: Food Chain


Featured authors

Margaret SimonsMargaret Simons writes on a river journey from basin to bowl in Sustaining a nation


Tony Barrell is surprised at the level of imported seafood, especially Nile Perch in How many miles?


Rebecca Huntley writes how cooking can give great fulfilment for all in
A taste of home


Nick Earls – a disastrous first date, with a vegan twist
The secret life of veal


annmaree O'KeeffeAnnmaree O'Keeffe and Chester Reimer – the key to survival Food security in the Arctic


Pauline NguyenPauline Nguyen – getting the fish sauce recipe right Born in Vietnam, made in Australia


» Online Only articles from Edition 27

Burnt sausages, gingerbread & fruitcake Alison Aprhys

The farm Sarah Kanowski

Rethinking Australian agriculture Rick Kemp

Shopping for revolution Paul Mitchell

Farming for a hungry world Anna Salleh

Desserted Alexandra Wilson


 

About Griffith REVIEW

Griffith REVIEW celebrates good writing and promotes public debate.

>> More on Griffith REVIEW


Griffith REVIEW Editorial Board
– Peer Review Information


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Next Edition

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When Donald Horne coined the phrase ‘The Lucky Country' with a large dollop of irony, he was pleading for changes to the institutions and attitudes that had made Australia complacent.

The time is right for a re-examination of Australia in an international context, of what we can expect in an era of globalisation and climate change.

>> More on Edition 28

From the Archives

Global warming

The writer in a
time of terror

In this essay from Edition 14, Frank Moorhouse writes about how so-called anti-terror legislation is undermining basic democratic rights on censorship and argues that long held principles should not be jettisoned.

This essay was awarded the Alfred Deakin Prize for an Essay Advancing Public Debate in the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards as well as the award for Social Equity Journalism in The Walkley Awards for Excellence in Journalism.

... More on Edition 14:
The Trouble with Paradise