PREFIGURATIVE POLITICS IN PRACTICE: CONCRETE UTOPIAS IN ITALY'S FOOD SOVEREIGNTY ACTIVISM*
What and how we eat have once again become prominent in debates on the fight for global justice. Proponents of alterglobalism consider experiments with food sovereignty a prefigurative practice that anticipates broader ecocultural change. Critics, however, remain skeptical about its capacity to enhance social change. In social movement research, the practical implications of these prefigurative politics have rarely been investigated empirically. Based on an ethnographic analysis, this article illustrates the multifaceted dynamics of a continuously evolving experiment with Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS) in a neorural microeconomic network, a cornerstone of food sovereignty activism. An ethnographic perspective can grasp the shifting terrain of the political mobilization, frictions and unintended consequences of these types of politics. The article demonstrates the importance of understanding the complexities of prefiguration as not a simple linear, coherent process. Also, the case study allows a critique of re-emerging neorural populism.
Contributor Notes
* I thank the activists of different local groups of Genuino Clandestino for their availability and permission to participate in their activities. This study was supported by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (ESRC), UK (project code ES/M011291/1). Names of individuals and minor locations have been changed, while those of public figures and main locations remain unaltered. I also thank Sergio Cabras, Massimiliano Minelli, Cristina Papa, Filippo Zerilli, and editors and reviewers at Mobilization for their constructive feedback.
† Alexander Koensler is Senior Researcher at University of Perugia, Italy, and member of Centre for Documentary Research at Queen's University Belfast, UK/Northern Ireland. Email: alexander.koensler@unipg.it.