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IHP Food Systems

Agriculture, Sustainability, and Justice

Understand the dynamics of local contexts within the global food system, exploring agriculture, food justice, global markets and exchange, sustainability, and social change.

At a Glance

Credits

16

Prerequisites

None

Courses taught in

English

Dates

Sep 1 – Dec 14

Program Countries

Ecuador, Malawi, Spain, United States

Program Base

USA, Ecuador, Malawi, Spain

Critical Global Issue of Study

Climate & Environment

Development & Inequality

Overview

Why a Comparative Study of Food Systems?

Rising global temperatures and growing populations are straining food access and availability. Journey from Georgia in the southern United States to Ecuador, Spain, and Malawi, as you study how food production, distribution, and consumption are affected by climate change impacts, global trade, and historic inequalities. Learn from farmers, fishers, herders, scientists, activists, and policy experts about livelihoods and food production, government programs, and innovative food safety and trade regulations. See the work of the University of Georgia’s top-ranked College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and compare it to small, organic, cooperative farms in other countries. Live with a farming family in Malawi, tour major food production hubs while exploring the biodiversity of Ecuador, and examine the complexity and disparity of feeding cities when tradition meets vanguard cuisine in Spain. Across continents, explore the importance of celebrating food and examine gastronomy as a key driver of social change. Uncover solutions that offer the most promise for sustainable food systems and futures at local, national, and global levels. 

Explore a Day in the Life of an IHP student!

Photos on this page may depict program sites from previous semesters. Please view the Program Sites section of this page to see where this program will travel.

Highlights

  • Investigate the history and legacy of plantation agriculture in the southern United States.
  • Explore the diversity of Ecuador’s agricultural centers from the Amazon to the Andes.
  • Witness agroecological farming practices amid increasing climate uncertainty on smallholder farms in Malawi.
  • Experience Spain’s culinary traditions, gastronomy, artisanal methods, and family farming.

Prerequisites

None

program map

Program Sites

United States: Atlanta, Athens & North Georgia

(10 days)

Study the history of plantation agriculture in the southern United States as a global phenomenon and understand its transformation into today’s industrial agricultural complex. Starting in Atlanta, the historic center of U.S. civil rights activism, explore resistance and alternative food movements in an urban context. Travel on to Athens, Georgia, to tour the University of Georgia’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences to understand innovative breeding and growing techniques as well as using food crops for cultural preservation. Then, head north into the Appalachian region to visit a fourth-generation apple orchard long committed to building strong rural communities. 

Ecuador: Quito, Nanegalito & Mashpi

(4+ weeks)

One of the most biodiverse countries in the world, Ecuador is home to four distinct ecological zones: the Pacific coast, the Andes Highlands, the Amazon rainforest & the Galapagos. This diverse territory represents both diverse populations and foods. Explore Quito’s urban agriculture program, born in response to increasing food insecurity in the poorest areas of the city. Trek south through the stunning Andes, passing through Machachi, Lasso, and Cotopaxi to learn from farmers and local communities about varied models of agricultural production and how food affects their livelihoods.

Malawi: Lilongwe, Mchinji, Salima & Ntcheu

(4+ weeks)

Explore perspectives on food insecurity from farmers and local leaders in Lilongwe, comparing efforts to increase yields through agricultural subsidies with improvements to food sovereignty and nutritional security via alternatives such as permaculture. Visit the shores of Lake Malawi, examining the possibilities of large-scale irrigation and fisheries projects. Journey south to rural communities near Ntcheu and live with smallholder farming families while studying the effects of cultural traditions, climate change, drought, ecology, migration, and international aid regimes on agricultural histories and futures for Malawi and the region.

Spain: Barcelona

(4+ weeks)

Embark on an enlightening journey with the Barcelona Urban Research Institute (IDRA) and its impressive network, delving into a critical examination of Barcelona’s agri-food model. As you navigate this iconic Mediterranean region, delve into the intricacies of local fisheries and farmers. Uncover the significant environmental and social impacts of the pig industry and scrutinize the global agri-food regime while exploring potential alternatives.

Encounter grassroots initiatives and local farmers engaged in regenerative and adaptive agriculture, contributing to the development of food sovereignty. Engage in discussions about waste, the prevalence of cheap food, knowledge displacement, and rediscover forgotten recipes. Participate in debates addressing Barcelona’s response to drought and the escalating challenge of water scarcity in the city.

Please note that SIT will make every effort to maintain its programs as described. To respond to emergent situations, however, SIT may have to change or cancel programs.

Academics

Program Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the program, students will be able to: 

  • Explain the relationships between individual actions and broader structures, policies, institutions, and movements (agricultural, labor, social, and other) that influence food systems. 
  • Demonstrate reflexivity, grasping the nuances of cultural relativism and ethnocentrism, in the comparative inquiry of livelihoods and labor (agricultural and other). 
  • Apply diverse tools to identify social, political, environmental, and economic challenges to food systems.   
  • Formulate equitable, just, and sustainable solutions to food insecurity.  
  • Explain the influence of local ecologies and methods of natural resource management on agricultural decision-making and sustainable/resilient practices at different scales, from households to states to international bodies. 
  • Analyze how “tradition,” “technology,” and “innovation” in agriculture influence health and economic disparities as well as impact social change.  
  • Practice inquiry informed by values of empathy, solidarity, self-reflection, humility, and open-mindedness as we balance field-based experiential and traditional classroom ways of learning about food security.

Read more about Program Learning Outcomes.



Coursework

Access virtual library guide.

The following syllabi are representative of this program. Because courses develop and change over time to take advantage of dynamic learning opportunities, actual course content will vary from term to term.

The syllabi can be useful for students, faculty, and study abroad offices in assessing credit transfer. Read more about credit transfer.

Please expand the sections below to see detailed course information, including course codes, credits, overviews, and syllabi.


This is SIT

  • We value active togetherness, reciprocity, and respect as the essential ingredients for building a sustainable community.
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  • With open minds, empathy, and courage, we facilitate intercultural understanding and respect for the commonalities and differences between people.
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  • We champion social inclusion & justice in all that we are and all that we do, from ensuring our community and our programs amplify the voices, agency, and dignity of all people to deliberately instilling the principles and practices of inclusion in all of our work.
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  • We are committed to human and environmental well-being through sustainability and contributing to a better world for all living and future generations.

Politics, Identity, and Food

People, Identity, and Food – syllabus
(ANTH3010 / 4 credits)

This course will help you to understand how access to food, eating habits, choices, and the pleasures and processes of food consumption often reveal distinctions of age, gender, status, class, occupation, ethnicity, and religion—within and among cultures. Explore the role food plays in people’s lives, including and in addition to nutrition, and how urbanization and globalization are changing relationships between people, their environments, production and distribution chains, and therefore relationships with food itself. Identity how development, food demand, and distribution systems shape each other, and learn about how access to food, along with strategies for health and nutrition, are culturally determined.

Getting from Field to Fork

Getting from Field to Fork – syllabus
(ECON3010 / 4 credits)

This course examines the most effective economic development strategies for increasing food security among the most vulnerable food producers and consumers, how to increase efficiencies and reduce waste in existing processing and distribution chains to ensure more equitable access, and how to develop sustainable food systems for rapidly growing urban populations. Explore how international trade and regulatory frameworks affect food production and distribution chains, analyzing how these frameworks can contribute to global food security, as well as how income inequality—at local, national and global scales—affect nutrition and health, and what strategies can be most effective in reducing disparities. This course allows you to investigate the role migration plays in food production and consumption in diverse communities, and how access to information (including digital technology) can improve efficiency of both food production and distribution systems.

Agriculture, Ecology, and Sustainable Futures

Agriculture, Ecology, and Sustainable Futures – syllabus
(ENVI3010 / 4 credits)

This course analyzes how to reach food security objectives while taking into account local and global environmental imperatives and realities. Explore the prospects of currently prevailing agricultural models and what solutions they offer, as well as alternative models—including ecologically integrated methods and scales. There is emphasis on what roles science, technology, and innovation will play in creating a more food secure world, and how global climate change affects and will continue to affect local environments—creating new threats, weaknesses, and opportunities for shifting priorities. Look into possible systems and tools to empower local food producers to promote productivity and ecological health, and examine how urban agriculture and other innovations can contribute to local food security in our rapidly urbanizing world.

People, Ethics, and Food Security

People, Ethics, and Food Security – syllabus
(POLI3010 / 4 credits)

This course explores questions related to land rights, income distribution and inequality, food distribution systems, government regulation, the role of international organizations, and policy crafting as they relate to food and food security. More specifically, learn how to define food security at local, national and global scales, and how different conceptions determine varied approaches. You will also discuss how land rights and livelihoods can be balanced with rising global pressures around food security, and how income distribution and inequality affect hunger, food production, and development. The course deeply examines how governments, NGOs, research institutes, and UN bodies, among others, can help develop global solutions to ensure food accessibility for urban and rural communities. These complex topics will help you build a rich understanding of food security issues in an increasingly globalized and urbanized world.

Housing

Accommodations

Student accommodations will include a mix of homestays, hostels, guesthouses, and small hotels/dorms. Students will experience homestays and will be oriented as they move from place to place.

More About Homestay Experiences:

Family structures will vary. For example, a host family may include a single mother of two small children, or a large extended family with many people coming and going. Please bear in mind that the idea of what constitutes a “home” (i.e., the physical nature of the house) may be different from what you would expect. You will need to be prepared to adapt to a new life with a new diet, a new schedule, new people, and possibly new priorities and expectations.

In most cases, students will be placed in homestays in pairs, with placements made to best accommodate health concerns, including allergies or dietary needs. Information about homestay families will only be available upon arriving in each country.

Career Paths

Relevant career paths include:

  • Agriculture and food production

  • Nonprofit management

  • Government

  • International development

  • Sustainability and climate change

Faculty & Staff

IHP Food Systems: Agriculture, Sustainability, and Justice

The faculty/staff team shown on this page is a sample of the individuals who may lead your specific program. Faculty and coordinators are subject to change to accommodate each program’s unique schedule and locations.

Joseph Lanning, PhD bio link
Joseph Lanning, PhD
Program Director and Associate Professor
Lowery Parker, PhD bio link
Lowery Parker, PhD
Launch Coordinator
Estefanía Sánchez L., MS bio link
Estefanía Sánchez L., MS
Country Coordinator, Ecuador
Mauro Castro Coma, PhD bio link
Mauro Castro Coma, PhD
Geoffrey Mlongoti bio link
Geoffrey Mlongoti
Country Coordinator, Malawi

Discover the Possibilities

  • Cost & Scholarships

    SIT Study Abroad is committed to ensuring that international education is within reach for all students. We believe in the transformative power of immersive, intercultural experiences and are dedicated to supporting students in their educational journey.

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  • HEALTH, ACCESS & IDENTITY

    A critical step in preparing for your study abroad program is planning how you will maintain your health and wellbeing. Please review the following information carefully and contact [email protected] with any questions or concerns.

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  • On program in Malawi

    Check out SIT students visiting with one of our Malawi partner organizations — with thanks to Permaculture Paradise Institute!

    A visit to Paradise
  • A DAY IN THE LIFE OF IHP

    Explore a Day in the Life of an IHP student!

    Learn More
  • IHP alumna receives prestigious Watson fellowship

    IHP alum Adilene Sandoval was among 42 seniors nationally, and one of two SIT study abroad alum, who received a grant as part of the 55th class of the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship.

    Read more