A free public conference at UC Santa Cruz Feb. 3-4 will address the question of "Labor Across the Food System." Scholars, researchers and activists from California and beyond will gather to discuss the role of labor and social justice in reshaping the contemporary global food system, one of the most labor-intensive industries in the economy.
"Food activism is the social movement of our time," said Mary Beth Pudup, a UC Santa Cruz community studies professor whose research focuses on community garden projects and who conceived of the conference. "Everyone talks about where your food comes from, but no one talks about who got it there.
"In my teaching and research it struck me over the years how separate the whole question of food justice and food access is from the question of labor," she said.
The conference will kick off at 7 p.m. Feb. 3 at the Humanities Lecture Hall with a keynote address by Frank Bardacke, a Watsonville resident who cut celery and lettuce in the fields for six years in the early 1970s and taught English as a second language teacher for 25 years. A labor activist and scholar, Bardacke is the author of "Good Liberals and Great Blue Herons: Land, Labor and Politics in the Pajaro Valley" and the recently published "Trampling Out the Vintage: Cesar Chavez and the Two Souls of the United Farm Workers" (Verso Books, 2011).
The conference will continue from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday, also at the Humanities Lecture Hall, with opening remarks by conference chair Pudup; Steve McKay, UC Santa Cruz associate professor of sociology and director of the Center for Labor Studies; and Julie Guthman, UC Santa Cruz professor of community studies and co-director of a multi-campus research program on food and the body. Guthman's recent book, "Weighing In: Obesity, Food Justice, and the Limits of Capitalism" (University of California, 2011) challenges many of the taken-for-granted assumptions about the so-called obesity epidemic and calls for more attention to injustices in food production.
Four panel discussions will follow on major sectors of labor in the food system: farm labor, food processing, shipping and retail, and food service and restaurants. Each panel will have a mix of scholars, journalists, and activists working on labor and food system issues.
The conference is presented by the Center for Labor Studies at UC Santa Cruz in collaboration with the university's Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems (CASFS) and the Food First Institute for Food and Development Policy in Oakland. It is organized by the UC Santa Cruz Institute for Humanities Research.
More information, including a list of participants and program schedule, may be found at http://ihr.ucsc.edu/laboracrossfoodsystem or by calling (831) 459-5655.
Major conference sponsors include the Food and the Body Multicampus Research Group, Berkeley Media Studies Group, Praxis Project, Prevention Institute, and the UC Santa Cruz Institute for Humanities Research, Community Studies Department, Environmental Studies Department, Sociology Department, Politics Department, Cowell College, Colleges Nine and Ten, and Oakes College. Additional financial support provided by the departments of American Studies, Anthropology, History, Latin American and Latino Studies, and Psychology.

