Abstract
What is agroecology’s moral vision, and what are the larger metaphysical, even theological, implications of it? Even though agroecology as a field now gathers collaborators from across the natural and social sciences, as well as members of farming communities and international movements, there remains relatively little explicit and sustained reflection upon this question. My main contention is that expanding agroecology’s dialogue of wisdoms (diálogo de saberes) to include theological traditions can address this lacuna. To show how, I explore the contribution of one particular theological tradition—Catholic social teaching—and how its account of integral ecology enables agroecologists to deepen their engagement with fundamental questions raised by their own normative commitments.
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Notes
This and all other ecclesial documents cited can be found at www.vatican.va
Bensin focuses upon three main areas: first, agricultural chemistry, which enabled the rise of the chemical fertilizer industry, especially nitrogen fertilizer; second, mechanical engineering and the breakthroughs in mechanization, with the increasing use of farm machinery like tractors, ploughs, harrows, and cultivators; and, third, plant genetics, plant breeding, and the production of improved seed varieties.
For more on the history and development of Catholic social teaching as a tradition, see Calvez and Perrin 1961; Schuck 1991; Curran 2002; Himes 2018. It is important to point out that feminist scholars have long pushed back against sexism in the Christian tradition and in Catholic social teaching. See especially Daly 1986; Reuther 1993; Johnson 1992.
Such a language, Pope Francis observes, also helps us to appreciate how our words both describe and enact our relationship to the world, affecting our choices and sha** our behavior. If we do not speak the language of kinship, we might instead begin to speak the language of lords and masters. “We have only one heart,” and so our relationships with what we love—God, other creatures, and one another—are inescapably interwoven (Pope Francis 2015b).
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Acknowledgements
Thanks to Natalie Carnes, Celia Deanne-Drummond, Carmody Grey, Jenny Howell, Austen Ivereigh, Jonathan Lett, Pete Jordan, Brittany McComb, Bethany Sollereder, Jonathan Tran, and Emilio Travieso for helpful conversations about and comments upon previous drafts of this article. Thanks also to the Laudato Si’ Research Institute (LSRI) at Oxford University for a fellowship which afforded the opportunity to engage with scholars at Campion Hall and at Oxford University on my research related to Catholic social teaching and agroecology.
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Whelan, M.P. Agroecology’s moral vision. Agric Hum Values 41, 413–426 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-023-10516-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-023-10516-5