Difference between revisions of "Seminar schedule 2023"

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Introduction by Roxana Triboi and an explanation of the challenges and background in governance by Nicole Pita of IPES. Agroecological Urbanism and the difference with traditional planning approaches - by Michiel Dehaene, Ghent University. You can [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2214_download&client_id=main view the presentation here.] Michiel Dehaene presented the results of the project Building an Agroecological Urbanism on the website, [https://agroecologicalurbanism.org/ which you can see here.]
Introduction by Roxana Triboi and an explanation of the challenges and background in governance by Nicole Pita of IPES. Agroecological Urbanism and the difference with traditional planning approaches - by Michiel Dehaene, Ghent University. You can [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2214_download&client_id=main view the presentation here.] Michiel Dehaene presented the results of the project Building an Agroecological Urbanism on the website, [https://agroecologicalurbanism.org/ which you can see here.]


Matthew Potteiger is a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the State University of New York, Syracuse, where his teaching, research and community projects focus on linking food systems with the design of landscape systems. He has studied food systems of Japan, Brazil and North American cities. For 10 years he taught a food systems design studio and has lead numerous community-based food system projects to for urban agriculture, public markets, and regional foodshed planning in New York State.


=Session March 16, 2023=
=Session March 16, 2023=
Joe Nasr and Matthew Potteiger present foundational visions and contemporary concepts of productive urban landscapes, and will give an outlook of approaches for this.  
After a short recap of the first two sessions, Joe Nasr and Matthew Potteiger presented foundational visions and contemporary concepts of productive urban landscapes, and an outlook of approaches for this. [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2216_download&client_id=main You can download the presentation here]. The [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023 recording of the lecture is on the landscape portal.]


Matthew Potteiger is a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the State University of New York, Syracuse, where his teaching, research and community projects focus on linking food systems with the design of landscape systems. He has studied food systems of Japan, Brazil and North American cities. For 10 years he taught a food systems design studio and has lead numerous community-based food system projects to for urban agriculture, public markets, and regional foodshed planning in New York State.  
Matthew Potteiger is a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the State University of New York, Syracuse, where his teaching, research and community projects focus on linking food systems with the design of landscape systems. He has studied food systems of Japan, Brazil and North American cities. For 10 years he taught a food systems design studio and has lead numerous community-based food system projects to for urban agriculture, public markets, and regional foodshed planning in New York State.  
Joe Nasr is an independent scholar, lecturer and consultant based in Toronto.  He has been exploring urban agriculture and food security issues for three decades.  Joe taught or held fellowships at a number of universities in several countries; he is a lecturer and member of the Centre for Studies in Food Security at Toronto Metropolitan University.  He co-wrote or co-edited five books and dozens of articles and co-edits the Springer Urban Agriculture Book Series.
Joe Nasr is an independent scholar, lecturer and consultant based in Toronto.  He has been exploring urban agriculture and food security issues for three decades.  Joe taught or held fellowships at a number of universities in several countries; he is a lecturer and member of the Centre for Studies in Food Security at Toronto Metropolitan University.  He co-wrote or co-edited five books and dozens of articles and co-edits the Springer Urban Agriculture Book Series.
=Session March 23, 2023=
The second phase focuses on the mapping of food systems. Marian Simón Rojo of UPM gave an introduction on the relevance of mapping for starting transformative actions and presented an overview of the types of mapping. Katrin Bohn, of Bohn&Viljoen Architects & the School of Architecture & Design of the University of Brighton, presented several projects and how mapping played a role in them. You can [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_II_March_23_2023 review the recording of the presentation here.] The PowerPoint with the introduction and presentation on types of mapping [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2224_download&client_id=main can be seen here.]
=Session March 30, 2023=
After an introduction by Marian Simón Rojo of UP Madrid, Jorge Molero of the Red de Municipios por la Agroecologia gave a presentation on Mapping the Short Food Supply Chains. You can [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2217_download&client_id=main see the presentation here]. You can find [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_II_March_30_2023 the recording of the session here.]
=Session April 13, 2023=
Marian Simón Rojo of the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid builds upon the former presentations on mapping. She shows how maps can be used for various aspects of the food system and for different goals. Maps can serve to analyse and present the needs, and the assets. They can also link up to policies and be used as a basis to develop strategies. Intersectoral collaboration is important in connecting sustainable food to health issues, food security, and well-being. Maps can also be created in a collaborative way to help communities to formulate common goals.
You can find [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_II_April_13_2023 the recording of the session here.]
=Session April 20, 2023=
The phase of collaborative goal setting and visioning started with an introduction by Damien Conaré on the background and experiences from France by Marc Nielsen of Terres en Villes) with the title Designing and implementing a local food strategy: key messages.
The participants engaged in an exercise using mural.co on collaborative goal setting in breakout rooms.
Y[https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2222_download&client_id=main ou can find the presentation of Damien Conaré and Marc Nielsen here.]. The recording of the session can be [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_III_April_20_2023 found on the webpage of the seminar here.]
=Session April 27, 2023=
Damien Conaré gave a short explanation on challenges, goals, visions, and activities related to the goals. Jess Halliday, Chief Executive of RUAF presented Inclusive multi-stakeholder platforms and food policy councils – from visioning to action planning and answered questions of the participants. [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2223_download&client_id=main You can find her presentation here.] [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_III_April_27_2023 The recording of the session can be viewed here]
=Session May 4, 2023=
Michiel Dehaene gave a short introduction to Phase IV on Strategy and visioning regarding the two sessions. Anna Wissmann presented the factsheets produced within the FOOD E project on the policy environment for sustainable city region food systems. The report of the working package on [https://foode.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/FoodE_WP6_D6.1_Report_and_Annex_ILS.pdf policy with the fact sheets can be found on the FOOD E website.]  Catherine Fierens from Bruxelles Environnement - Brussels Capital Region showed the Brussels Case (with focus on BoerenBruxselPaysan trajectory), giving a personal account of a policy entrepreneur. The report on the Boerenbrussel can be downloaded from the [https://www.boerenbruxselpaysans.be/agropolis/?lang=en website of the project.]. You can find the [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_IV_May_4_2023 recording of the session on the website.]
=Session May 11, 2023=
AESOP4Food Phase V session 2. After a short introduction from Michiel Dehaene, our invited lecturer Sebastien Marot (Marne-la-Vallée School of Architecture/ EPFL) gave on rear view mirror and scenarios of agriculture and architecture, based on the architectural Triennale in Lisbon 2019 and the exhibition that has been developed from that. You cand find the videorecordings [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlsFFRNs1wk&feature=youtu.be here].
=Session May 25, 2023=
AESOP4Food Phase VI session one on monitoring and evaluation. Aleksandra Nowysz presents the evaluation frameworks for City Region Food Systems and the Milano Urban Food Policy Pact. Roxana Triboi elaborates on a case study on how for the Territorial Food Strategies in France are monitored, with the example of the region of Clermont Ferrand. Here you can find the [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jZUVs31w_n__PihECXzcvA_GwlGpI-AT/view presentation] and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qLaq3ryq84&feature=youtu.be videorecording] of the session.
=Session June 1, 2023=
In the last session of the 2023 season, Anna Podlasek gave a lecture on the Theoretical and practical background of Monitoring& Evaluation methods. Here are the [https://lnicollab.landscape-portal.org/goto.php?target=file_2236_download&client_id=main presentation] and [https://www.landscape-portal.org/sustainable-food-planning-2023/#Presentation_Phase_V_May_25_and_June_1_2023 videorecordings].

Latest revision as of 19:46, 1 June 2023

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The seminar is a combination of lectures (theoretical, case study and projects presentation) and interactive exercises that introduces the conceptual frameworks of Agroecological Urbanism, Regional Agroecological Food Systems, Multi-level governance, Food justice and democracy. The transdisciplinary approach is supported by the Participatory Action Learning Research and Action Learning Research (PALAR) in connection with a series of existing Living Labs on food resilience.

International participants from different background and level of education and professional expertise (from planning disciplines, agronomy, environmental sciences, and related subjects) are invited to participate to this transdisciplinary and participatory learning activity that supports a broader understanding of the contemporary challenges and existing strategies of approaching sustainable food systems in the context of spatial planning.

There will be two possible forms of participation: only attending the lectures and discussions or working on the assignment (5 ECTS). The assignment participants will work in small teams that focus on Living Labs or projects. They will benefit from additional tutoring/ feedback sessions and present their results in intermediary sessions.

The online seminar structured in 12 sessions (with additional presentations for assignment students) will take place in the first half of spring of 2023, running from March 2nd until June 1st 2023, Thursdays from 17.00 until 18.30 CET on zoom.

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Session March 2, 2023

In the first session Roxana Triboi: gave an introduction to the program of the seminar and its learning goals. Damien Conaré showed the historical context and the field of play with the main sustainable food challenges. On the basis of an interactive session, Jeroen de Vries reviewed the main concepts for sustainable food planning. The PowerPoint presentation can be viewed here, the video recording of the plenary parts can be seen on the landscape portal.

Session March 9, 2023

Introduction by Roxana Triboi and an explanation of the challenges and background in governance by Nicole Pita of IPES. Agroecological Urbanism and the difference with traditional planning approaches - by Michiel Dehaene, Ghent University. You can view the presentation here. Michiel Dehaene presented the results of the project Building an Agroecological Urbanism on the website, which you can see here.


Session March 16, 2023

After a short recap of the first two sessions, Joe Nasr and Matthew Potteiger presented foundational visions and contemporary concepts of productive urban landscapes, and an outlook of approaches for this. You can download the presentation here. The recording of the lecture is on the landscape portal.

Matthew Potteiger is a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the State University of New York, Syracuse, where his teaching, research and community projects focus on linking food systems with the design of landscape systems. He has studied food systems of Japan, Brazil and North American cities. For 10 years he taught a food systems design studio and has lead numerous community-based food system projects to for urban agriculture, public markets, and regional foodshed planning in New York State.

Joe Nasr is an independent scholar, lecturer and consultant based in Toronto. He has been exploring urban agriculture and food security issues for three decades. Joe taught or held fellowships at a number of universities in several countries; he is a lecturer and member of the Centre for Studies in Food Security at Toronto Metropolitan University. He co-wrote or co-edited five books and dozens of articles and co-edits the Springer Urban Agriculture Book Series.

Session March 23, 2023

The second phase focuses on the mapping of food systems. Marian Simón Rojo of UPM gave an introduction on the relevance of mapping for starting transformative actions and presented an overview of the types of mapping. Katrin Bohn, of Bohn&Viljoen Architects & the School of Architecture & Design of the University of Brighton, presented several projects and how mapping played a role in them. You can review the recording of the presentation here. The PowerPoint with the introduction and presentation on types of mapping can be seen here.

Session March 30, 2023

After an introduction by Marian Simón Rojo of UP Madrid, Jorge Molero of the Red de Municipios por la Agroecologia gave a presentation on Mapping the Short Food Supply Chains. You can see the presentation here. You can find the recording of the session here.

Session April 13, 2023

Marian Simón Rojo of the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid builds upon the former presentations on mapping. She shows how maps can be used for various aspects of the food system and for different goals. Maps can serve to analyse and present the needs, and the assets. They can also link up to policies and be used as a basis to develop strategies. Intersectoral collaboration is important in connecting sustainable food to health issues, food security, and well-being. Maps can also be created in a collaborative way to help communities to formulate common goals.

You can find the recording of the session here.

Session April 20, 2023

The phase of collaborative goal setting and visioning started with an introduction by Damien Conaré on the background and experiences from France by Marc Nielsen of Terres en Villes) with the title Designing and implementing a local food strategy: key messages.

The participants engaged in an exercise using mural.co on collaborative goal setting in breakout rooms.

You can find the presentation of Damien Conaré and Marc Nielsen here.. The recording of the session can be found on the webpage of the seminar here.

Session April 27, 2023

Damien Conaré gave a short explanation on challenges, goals, visions, and activities related to the goals. Jess Halliday, Chief Executive of RUAF presented Inclusive multi-stakeholder platforms and food policy councils – from visioning to action planning and answered questions of the participants. You can find her presentation here. The recording of the session can be viewed here

Session May 4, 2023

Michiel Dehaene gave a short introduction to Phase IV on Strategy and visioning regarding the two sessions. Anna Wissmann presented the factsheets produced within the FOOD E project on the policy environment for sustainable city region food systems. The report of the working package on policy with the fact sheets can be found on the FOOD E website. Catherine Fierens from Bruxelles Environnement - Brussels Capital Region showed the Brussels Case (with focus on BoerenBruxselPaysan trajectory), giving a personal account of a policy entrepreneur. The report on the Boerenbrussel can be downloaded from the website of the project.. You can find the recording of the session on the website.

Session May 11, 2023

AESOP4Food Phase V session 2. After a short introduction from Michiel Dehaene, our invited lecturer Sebastien Marot (Marne-la-Vallée School of Architecture/ EPFL) gave on rear view mirror and scenarios of agriculture and architecture, based on the architectural Triennale in Lisbon 2019 and the exhibition that has been developed from that. You cand find the videorecordings here.

Session May 25, 2023

AESOP4Food Phase VI session one on monitoring and evaluation. Aleksandra Nowysz presents the evaluation frameworks for City Region Food Systems and the Milano Urban Food Policy Pact. Roxana Triboi elaborates on a case study on how for the Territorial Food Strategies in France are monitored, with the example of the region of Clermont Ferrand. Here you can find the presentation and videorecording of the session.

Session June 1, 2023

In the last session of the 2023 season, Anna Podlasek gave a lecture on the Theoretical and practical background of Monitoring& Evaluation methods. Here are the presentation and videorecordings.