Participants at the decolonial decision making workshop at the Gathering Table 2025. Credit: Tay Aziz
For this week's continuation of the summit blog series, we have invited Nicola Scott (Pathways to Land for BPOC project) to share insights from the workshop she ran on Decolonial Decision Making.
Participants at the decolonial decision making workshop at the Gathering Table 2025. Credit: Tay Aziz
I felt privileged to co-facilitate a Decolonial Decision-making workshop at the Gathering Table Summit, with Diana Garduño Jiménez (Nourish Scotland), aiming to address:
To begin to answer these questions, we took a participatory and interactive approach using applied learnings from Indigenous Canadian activist scholar Andrea Menard’s key elements of decolonisation, to enable participants to:
Having co-authored the book ‘Reclaiming Economics for Future Generations’ which called to diversify, decolonise and democratise economics and economic systems (with the food system being a key one), this workshop unpacked specific parts of those '3-Ds' in relation to food organisations and decision-making within them.
I also developed the ongoing Pathways to Land for BPOC project with Jo Kamal and Pauline Shakespeare, who work on farming and food justice issues. Pathways identifies some of the financial and other barriers to access land Black and People of Colour face on which to farm and/or establish community food growing spaces, as well as recommendations to help address them. These challenges are a key roadblock to furthering food justice, with many of their root causes stemming from land enclosures and extractive food systems expanded through European colonialism.
The workshop addressed the topics of decolonial organisations and decision-making within them through asking participants:
Inevitably, more questions and actions emerged in this workshop about decolonising food organisations and decision making within them, which myself and Pathways colleagues will begin to address through funding we’ve recently been granted.
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Follow us over the coming weeks as we publish deeper dives into the sessions and share resources, reflections, and ways to get involved.
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