Facing Race: A National Conference in St. Louis, MO — November 20-22, 2024

Kirtrina Baxter

Community Organizer | Public Interest Law Center
Kirtrina M. Baxter, M.A. a mother, drummer, food justice activist and community organizer. As an Afroecologist, she has a passion for preserving & creating cultural traditions through nutrition, growing food, seedkeeping, and advocacy. Kirtrina is the community organizer for the Garden Justice Legal Initiative at the Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia. She assists gardeners in gaining access to land and resources. She also organizes Soil Generation, a diverse body of urban agriculture advocates & food justice activists who help inform policy and provide gardeners with support.

Presentations from Facing Race 2016

Building Solidarity for Food and Land Sovereignty

This workshop is intended to harness existing and broad interest in food access, security, and justice to create accountable and anti-racist support movement building for land and food sovereignty. There is tremendous grassroots, often people of color-led, organizing happening in the North America to promote land and food sovereignty. Concurrently, an increasing number of sectors, including lawyers, planners, policy-makers, foundations, are bringing attention to food security. “Professionals” tend to remain in their silos, only reaching out to gather data or provide information about services or policies that have been designed without input from the people most affected by or in need of them. The reality is that researchers, attorneys, and policymakers do not always ask the same questions as gardeners, farmers, or community leaders. And because of this, the reality is that researchers, attorneys, policymakers, and foundations may not be asking the right questions. And, at the same time, individuals, unincorporated associations, community based organizations, and small business enterprises have the necessary expertise to guide the work and real resource needs that could be supported by others acting in solidarity. More importantly, individuals, unincorporated associations, community based organizations, and small business enterprises have the necessary expertise to guide the work, though may face barriers to getting the resources to act. We see this as a pivot place where folks acting in solidarity can get involved. Our goal, through this workshop, is to flip the script on how privilege plays out in potential food and land sovereignty collaborations.

Speakers: Amy Laura Cahn, Kirtrina Baxter