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Family Farm Defenders Podcast

Family Farm Defenders Podcast

By: Family Farm Defenders
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This podcast aims uplift the voices of our members and allies who are on the front lines of the struggles for a fair, just, and resilient agriculture system rooted in food sovereignty, agroecology, peace, and international solidarity. These episodes highlight the actions and advocacy in support of diverse family farmers producing healthy local and regional foods while also challenging the agribusiness narrative to realize systemic change.

Learn more at familyfarmers.org

Economics Management Management & Leadership Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Pesticides Know No Boundaries
    Jun 28 2026

    "Pesticide drift, which may appropriately be called chemical trespassing, harms our environment and human health. This conversation between Rob Faux, farmer and Communications Manager for Pesticide Action Network who has experienced drift firsthand, and Bill Freese, Science Director with Center for Food Safety and advocate for pesticide regulation, touches on the types of pesticide drift, their known and potential effects, the actions that Environmental Protection Agency are (and are not) taking to remedy these concerns, and avenues for change. Thanks to Melinda Hemmelgarn, registered dietitian and investigative nutritionist for Food Sleuth radio, for moderating this discussion. Our apologies for moments of low video quality during this webcast."

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Land Access in Sustainable Agriculture
    Feb 17 2026

    What are the current barriers to land access for farmers in the United States? Can models like specific types of land tenure and collective governance offer alternatives? In the next decade 400,000 acres of farmland is estimated to transition from current ownership. With forces like land speculation and gentrification, what will the fate of this farmland be? In this conversation, Annette Hiatt (Land Loss Prevention Project) and Nathan Galaviz (Agrarian Trust) speak with Stephen Bartlett (Sustainable Agriculture of Louisville) about the current landscape and possible solutions and alternatives for this perennial problem. We know we can't beat a hedge fund with a CSA - but what needs to change for there to be a future for sustainable agriculture?

    Facilitator and Panelist Bios:

    Nathan M. Galaviz is Commons Manager at Agrarian Trust, a national farmland trust focused on community-led, non-extractive models of land tenure. He supports Agrarian Commons projects across the country with strategic guidance on real estate, governance, conservation, and capital structure, integrating blended finance tools with long-term stewardship. Rooted in land stewardship and ecological agriculture, Nathan also manages a pastured sheep farm in western North Carolina, where he is working to restore riparian habitat. A licensed commercial real estate broker specializing in farm and ranch properties, he works to sustain creative pathways for farmland transition and secure tenure for the next generation. Nathan brings to NFFC both practical farming experience and deep expertise in land access, advancing strategies that center community control, ecological resilience, and rematriation.

    Annette Hiatt is a Senior Staff Attorney with the Land Loss Prevention Project. She enjoys working one on one with clients to retain and preserve the connection of family to the ownership and retention of land. Ms. Hiatt received her Bachelor of Social Work from UNC-Charlotte and her J.D. from Case Western Reserve University. She is a North Carolina Dispute Resolution Commission Certified Superior Court mediator, achieving that status in 2015. Ms. Hiatt is a legal fellow with the Sustainable Economies Law Center, a member of the North Carolina Local Food Council and the mother to two kiddos who lead her on many adventures.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Winners and Losers in Agricultural Trade
    Feb 17 2026

    "These agreements are explicitly set up for trade – not to promote sustainable development. That’s the starting premise, and that’s why we get these results.” - Karen Hansen-Kuhn

    Jim Goodman (President of the National Family Farm Coalition) and Karen Hansen-Kuhn (Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy) sit down with Raj Patel (UT Austin’s LBJ School of Public Affairs) to talk about the current state of agricultural trade. They discuss some of the structural issues underlying how profitability skews trade to benefit large agribusiness over the small farmer, go into detail about China and the soybean market (15:00), and the USMCA deal (21:00), and talk about the many possibilities that exist for creating a fairer, more transparent system.

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    52 mins
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