top of page

Kai Sovereignty

The Kai Sovereignty discussion document

There are still people alive who have memories of the extensive whānau and kainga mara of the middle decades of the 20th Century. These kaumatua recall that people were healthy and nobody went hungry. The confluence of the urban drift, the arrival of supermarkets, increased imports of food and the expansion of industrial agriculture saw these gardens diminish over the decades.

 

This document explores some of the greenshoots of the emergence of a regenerative food systems that can deliver improved nutrition, environmental outcomes and renew options for economic wellbeing.

 

Envisioning what kai sovereignty might look like in 2040, leads to the inevitable conclusion that the food system has to have deliberately designed pathways and policies to achieve desirable outcomes.

 

These pathways are:

 

  • Continued repatriation of the whenua.

  • Owning more of the value chain from production to the distribution of kai.

  • Replacing industrial fishing with whānau and hāpu owned fishing and aquaculture.

  • A high tech/low tech future with whānau able to support revitalisation of kainga through participation in the weightless economy.

  • Pātaka kai as a short term measure to alleviate food poverty.

  • Aligning kai and hauora aspirations.

  • Helping to shape Aotearoa’s food policy.

Access the Kai Sovereignty discussion document here.

kai sovereignty cover 2.png

See the description above.

cover thumbshot.png

This report from Climate Action Tai Tokerau explores the pathways to transition from the industrial food system, to a regenerative food system in Te Tai Tokerau.

report cover.png

This report explores how mātauranga Māori and Western science can come together in regenrative farming practices.

bottom of page