\-torQ \:) t U\'l G<- v,J 1"L< I \ "'" A-a. e '1 )'Nl A- l ,S£t'Y' c... \A l J lit ,>h (Q 20 \1. a vJJ S \A S+t1l C \ p-S<; '(Z ACL -- yvtLT f N!ss) , (g ---- t:yYv\. \-) ru1l q..e. '0 13 Just Food? E. Melanie DuPuis, Jill Lindsey Harrison, and David Goodman In 2002, the title for the Community Food Security Coalition Conference in Seattle was "Think Globally, Act Locally." In 2010, the title for the New Orleans conference is "Food, Culture and Justice: The Gumbo tha t Unites Us All." As the titles and talks for this year's conference indicate, local food movement activists have discovered the word "justice" and are rethinking localist strategies to link with more global food move- ments. This change reflects the fact that food movement groups are increasingly incorporating the word justice on their Web pages, in their nonprofit names, and in the names of the programs they initiate, sucll as the California Food and Justice Coalition or Growing Power's The Growing Food and Justice for All Initiative. Yet, food movement activists continue to talk about "healthy communities," about increased social connectedness between eaters and producers, about neighbors becoming more caring of one another, about face-to-face relationships, and about trust, transparency, and access. Emotional words like caring and trust become signposts on which the notion of food justice hangs. Therefore, while one seldom sees the statement "Local food systems are more just," ideas about "local food" and "just food" tend to get connected in food activist talk. Many scholars who study alternative food systems often make similar arguments abOllt the links between local food systems and social justice, with case studies showing that relocalization is leading to more equitable and more democratic food systems and, in general, to healthier civil societies (Holloway and Kneafsey 2004; Hassane in 2003; DeLind 2002; Lyson 2005; Miele and Murdoch 2002; Kloppenburg, Hendrickson, and Stevenson 1996). Jack Kloppenburg and his colleagues' engaging essay "Coming into the Foodshed," widely regarded as a seminal work in local food scholarship, exemplifies this connection between local food and a more just world. In it, the authors describe the foodshed as "one vehicle