Conference AESOP-SFP Madrid19. FINAL PROGRAM

Dduende

(Side event) PhD Workshop Wednesday 6th November. Escuela de Arquitectura (Faculty of Architecture)

12:30 – 13:00: Registration – get to know each other – short individual presentation 

13:00 – 14:00: Interactive training session 

14:00 – 14:30: Lunch

14:30 – 16:00: Masterclass with Prof. Dr. González de Molina

16:00 – 16:15: Coffee break

16:15 – 17:00: Wrap up –  Paris 2020, next steps of AESOP PhD and YP Group

Thursday 7th November. Escuela de Arquitectura (Faculty of Architecture)

8:30 – 9:15       Registration

9:15-9:45     Official Welcome and Opening Remarks

Alberto Garrido, Vice Chancellor for Quality and Efficiency Universidad Politécnica de Madrid

José Miguel Fde-Güell, Director Urban and Territorial Planning Department (UPM)

Chiara Tornaghi, Chair AESOP-Sustainable Food Planning

9:45-10:45   Keynote Speaker. Manuel González de Molina (Pablo Olavide University) “How to scale up Agroecology: Proposals for advancing the agroecological transition”

10:45-11:00     Coffee break

11:00-12:15    Parallel Sessions I

Aula 1

  • Chairperson: Chiara Tornaghi 
  • Innovations in farmland management to support a transition towards agro-ecology and more territorialized food systems.    Coline Perrin
  • Agricultural Landscapes of Densification. The Case of Luxembourg. Ivonne Weichold
  • Strategic spatial planning and reorientation of the agro-food system in Valencia. Evaluating urban transformative capacities for sustainability. Sergio Segura Calero and Nancy Sarabia**
  • Planning for food through agroparks: room for manoeuvre fostering sustainable farming. Elke Vanempten**

    Aula 2

  • Chairperson: Caroline Brand
  • Does agro-ecological transition of the city necessarily implies alternative urban policies ? A discussion through the Carma project in Paris. Paula Mace-Le-Ficher
  • How to operationalize urban food systems in planning? A transectoral approach. Margot Olbertz and Christoph Kasper
  • Tools for the ecological transition. A proposal of indicators for the community of Madrid. Laura Jiménez Bailón**
  • Urban food strategy of Madrid: an evaluative case-study. Tanya Zerbian**

Aula 3

  • Chairperson: Henk Renting
  • The birth of Food Council MRA. Arnold van der Valk
  • From grassroots to collaborative action: Governance of a community garden with a neighbourhood-level food cycle in suburban Tokyo. Naomi Shimpo**
  • Agro-ecology and the Metropolitan Biopolitics of Food in Cape Town and Johannesburg. Florian Kroll
  • The emergence of translocal city food networks: reinventing meta-governance for sustainable food security. Ana Moragues-Faus

12:15-13:30    Parallel Sessions II

Aula 1

  • Chairperson: Michiel Dehaene
  • Crisis in urban, agricultural and food systems. Situated knowledge approach towards resilience potentials for urbanism issues and tools. Caroline Brand
  • Urban/rural co-productions. Planning approaches for improving the sustainability of local food systems in Italy and England. Luca Lazzarini**
  • Agroecological Landscape Modelling as a Deliberative Tool: Prospective Horizons of Socioecological Planning in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area (Vallès County, Catalonia. Roc Padró
  • Spatial planning as a lever for agroecology, the missing ingredient in the re-localization of food system in the Mediterranean basin. Marian Simón

Aula 2

  • Chairperson: Kathrin Specht
  • Feeding Sustainable Cities Platform reshaping the Portuguese foodscape: Exploring the role of internet and ICTs. Cecília Delgado**
  • The role of knowledge and universities in food democracy. Camilla Adelle
  • Emerging new food systems – transforming education and training systems. Niels Heine Kristensen. 
  • The Foodprint Melbourne project: a transdisciplinary approach to establish an evidence base, future vision and policy framework for sustainable urban food system transformation in Melbourne, Australia. Seona Candy**

13:30        Lunch time

14:30-15:30    Keynote Speaker Luis Orive (Vitoria City Council)   “Difficulties for the implementation of an agroecological model in Vitoria-Gasteiz”

15:45-17:30    Parallel Sessions III 

Aula 1

  • Chairperson: Marian Simón
  • Food-productive infrastructure: Enabling agroecological transitions from an urban design perspective. Katrin Bohn**
  • Embedding agroecology’s soil care principle in the urbanised society: the case of Flanders. Hans Vandermaelen**
  • Food and Multifunctional Urban Green Infrastructure. Julián Briz**
  • Food Planning Matters – Towards an Integrated Approach for a Sustainable Rural Urban Nexus. Christoph Kasper**
  • The Urban Agriculture Nexus. Silvio Caputo**
  • Exploring the food in the urban food-water-energy-nexus: innovations and policies for resilient and sustainable urban development. Alexandra Doernberg**

Aula 2

  • Chairperson: Emilie Houde-Tremblay
  • Prosumer, Food Growing, Food Policies. Jan Eelco Jansma
  • Tourism in support of agroecological food production. Barbara Maćkiewicz and  Ana Espinosa
  • Short supply chains and agroecological transition in the Cusco region (Peruvian Andes). Reflections on the hybridization of different sustainability approaches. Margaux Girard**
  • The role of the rural Open Public Food Markets in the construction of territory. Nadia Fava**
  • An invisible movement in city:  the transformation through the agroalimentary system. Cristina Rodríguez García**
  • Does food availability differ by socioeconomic status of the neighborhood? A typology of foodscapes of Montpellier, France. Vonthron, Simon **
  • Is urban (food) planning contributing to build class divisions?’ An approach to food geographies contradictions. Inés Morales Bernardos

18:30- 20:30  Optional visits

Local food and drink tasting at El Fogón Verde, an agroecological restaurant located in the centre of Madrid.

Inland CAR. Centro de Acercamiento a lo Rural, a platform  that links territory, culture and social change

Friday 8th November. Escuela de Arquitectura 

9:30-10:30    Keynote Speaker Emma Siliprandi (FAO). 

“UN-Partners’ Scaling up Agroecology Initiative – a framework to guide the transition towards sustainable food and agricultural systems”

10.30 – 10:45  Pausa café

10:45 – 12:00     Parallel Sessions IV 

Aula 1

  • Chairperson: Coline Perrin
  • Productive cities for urban regeneration: the case study of Turin (proGIreg H2020 project). Giacomo Pettenati
  • Integrating agroecology in urban food strategies to fight food poverty. Potential impact in Madrid’s deprived neighbourhoods. Marian Simón**
  • Exploring the spatial planning dimensions of urban informal food. Luoman Zhao**
  • The transformative potential of community kitchens for an agroecological urbanism. Preliminary insights and a research agenda. Carlotta Gennari**

Aula 2

  • Chairperson:  Daniel López, Fundación Entretantos, Red de Ciudades por la Agroecología
  • Who Governs the Food Agenda?  Food democracy and power in an American City. Mary P Corcoran**
  • Can Living-Lab be a tool to foster Food Democracy ? An analysis of a territorialised agri-food system reshaping process in France. Romain Feche**
  • Towards a more-than-human right to the city. Debra Solomon**
  • Striving for food democracy through municipal Food Policy Councils. Experiences from Germany and Canada. Marit Rosol

12.00 – 12.30 Posters Sessions

RENASCENCE: The Role of European National Health Services in the enhancement of sustainable food systems. Goiuri Alberdi Aresti & Mirene Begiristain Zubillaga

Delivering a healthy and sustainable food economy in Letchworth Garden City, UK. Andre Amelie 

Urban, circular economy mushroom farm has large climate change impacts from transport  Erica Dorr, Christine Aubry, Benoit Gabrielle

Moving to town : urban appropriations of agroecology in Madrid and Quito. Émilie Houde-Tremblay

Food sovereignty in a globalized urban world. Strategies, arenas and actors in the current food movement in Bucaramanga, Santander, Colombia. Laura Mendoza Sandoval

Relación entre los huertos sociales, kilometraje de alimentos y existencia de desiertos alimentarios agroecológicos. Carolina Orjuela-García

Demonstration plots in Maputo’s urban agriculture as adaptive instrument to disseminate knowledge and to promote innovation for an agroecological change .C. Z. Seichter, A. Tobies  

Agroecological production in the Community of Madrid.Laura Jiménez, Julia del Valle-González, Raquel Clemente-Pereiro; Sociedad Cooperativa Germinando  

Albov – developing agroecological urbanism:the intersection of food sovereignty and food democracy. Megan Resler & Sophia Hagolani-

Urban Agriculture and the Food-Energy-Water-NEXUS: Comparison of Policy Documents of five Metropolitan Regions in Europe and the U.S. Kathrin Specht

Urban Food Strategy of Madrid: An evaluative case study. Tanya Zerbian

Exploring the spatial planning dimensions of urban informal food systems in China. Luoman Zhao

Creating and sharing knowledge in Organic Agriculture, Food Systems and Urban Planning.

GO PAUSA

12:30        Lunch time

13:30-14:45    Parallel Sessions V

Aula 1

  • Chairperson: Marian Simón
  • A spatial perspective on food transition in diffused settlements. Lessons from the Veneto region. Alessandra Manganelli**
  • URBAL: a tool to unfold the impacts of urban-driven innovations on food systems’ sustainability. The example of two case-studies in Montpellier (France). Elodie Valette
  • Multifunctional Urban Space. Urban agriculture as a tool for climate vulnerability mitigation. Giulia Lucertini**
  • “Innovativeness” in urban agriculture: Which novelties in the social, environmental and economic dimension do urban agriculture projects produce? Kathrin Specht

Aula 2

  • Chairperson: Nerea Morán
  • “You need to have a shared vision”: Factors that support or obstruct the sustainable establishment and development of urban community gardens. Runrid Fox-Kämper
  • From Leisure to Necessity: Evolution of urban allotments in the province of Alicante in time of crisis. Marit Rosol, Ana Espinosa Seguí and Barbara Mackiewicz
  • Food production and distribution in allotment gardens: past or future? Ewa Kacprzak-Barbara Mackiewicz -Magdalena Szczepańska**
  • Urban Agriculture as Activism: The Cases of São Paulo and Paris.  Gustavo Nagib**

Aula 3

  • Chairperson: Alberto Matarán. Universidad de Granada
  • How multi-level food policy networks can improve local food systems: evaluating the Dutch ‘City deal: Food on the Urban Agenda. Lara Sibbing**
  • Food sovereignty in a globalized urban world. Strategies, arenas and actors in the current food movement in City-Region of Bucaramanga, Santander, Colombia. Laura Mendoza Sandoval
  • Deepening, broadening, and scaling-up: the case of Australian local food initiatives. Leticia Canal Vieira** (no pub.)
  • Integrating traditional private actors in the construction of a food public strategy: the case of independent shopkeepers and wholesalers in Paris. Natacha Rollinde**

14:45-15:30    Plenary. Wrap-up.  Scientific Committee

Institutional Closing words: Alejandro Benito. Chair Applied Research and Agrarian Extension Department. IMIDRA (Instituto Madrileño de Investigación y Desarrollo Rural, Agrario y Alimentario)

Manuel Blanco. Director School of Architecture. Universidad Politécnica de Madrid

Friday 8th November. Afternoon LCE – La Casa Encendida

17:00-18:30    Open Discussion Session. Researches-Social Movements-Local Government. Who’s planning an agroecological transition that addresses the climate emergency? Convenor: Marian Simón Rojo

  • Emma Silipandri. FAO Scaling up agroecology
  • Alberto Leboreiro Amaro. Vice-director Regional Planning, Government Agency Comunidad de Madrid
  • Agustín Hernández Aja, President WG Sustainability CRUE (Conference of Spanish Universities’ Rectors)
  • Luis Velasco and Juan Carlos Liano.  Madrid Agroecológico / AUPA / Trasiego

19:00-21:00    Social Dinner

Saturday 9th November

9.30-15:30  Field Trip. Visit to urban and periurban agro-ecological projects

We will visit spaces with artisan canning projects, embedded in the historically working-class neighborhoods of the south of the city and cooperative agro-ecological projects, involved in alternative food networks in the Agrarian Park. We will be able to taste the fruit of their work, as the visit culminates with an agroecological meal in one of the farms, rich in biodiversity and peasant wisdom.