TY - JOUR
T1 - Centralization can jeopardize local wild plant-based food security
AU - Mattalia, G
AU - Prakofjewa, J
AU - Kalle, R
AU - Pruse, B
AU - Marozzi, M
AU - Stryamets, N
AU - Kuznetsova, Natalia
AU - Belichenko, O
AU - Aziz, Ma
AU - Pieroni, A
AU - Soukand, R
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Centralization is one mechanism of authoritative control, where citizens receive operation guidelines from a single source. This can impact various spheres of life including local gastronomic knowledge, a cornerstone of biocultural diversity. We explored how to evaluate the effects of Soviet centralization on wild food plant local gastronomic knowledge. We considered four case studies of ethnic communities that are divided by political borders. In total, we conducted 581 semi-structured interviews. Our results suggest three main findings. The first regards the high similarity of use of wild food plants among the communities living in Russia and Finland. The second involves the higher proportion of simple preparations made with wild food plants in Soviet contexts, which is not evident in adjacent non-Soviet countries. The third concerns the low(er) number of distinct wild plant-based foods retained by non-Soviet countries and, in post-Soviet contexts, those that refer to past uses. We argue that the erosion of wild food plant-based local gastronomic knowledge guided by homogenization and repression poses a serious risk to local food security.
AB - Centralization is one mechanism of authoritative control, where citizens receive operation guidelines from a single source. This can impact various spheres of life including local gastronomic knowledge, a cornerstone of biocultural diversity. We explored how to evaluate the effects of Soviet centralization on wild food plant local gastronomic knowledge. We considered four case studies of ethnic communities that are divided by political borders. In total, we conducted 581 semi-structured interviews. Our results suggest three main findings. The first regards the high similarity of use of wild food plants among the communities living in Russia and Finland. The second involves the higher proportion of simple preparations made with wild food plants in Soviet contexts, which is not evident in adjacent non-Soviet countries. The third concerns the low(er) number of distinct wild plant-based foods retained by non-Soviet countries and, in post-Soviet contexts, those that refer to past uses. We argue that the erosion of wild food plant-based local gastronomic knowledge guided by homogenization and repression poses a serious risk to local food security.
KW - Local Ecological Knowledge
KW - Local Gastronomic Knowledge (LGK)
KW - Post-soviet countries
KW - Soviet Union
KW - Wild edible plants
KW - biocultural diversity
KW - effect of centralization
KW - Local Ecological Knowledge
KW - Local Gastronomic Knowledge (LGK)
KW - Post-soviet countries
KW - Soviet Union
KW - Wild edible plants
KW - biocultural diversity
KW - effect of centralization
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/252175
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/27685241.2023.2191798
U2 - 10.1080/27685241.2023.2191798
DO - 10.1080/27685241.2023.2191798
M3 - Article
SN - 2768-5241
VL - 95
SP - N/A-N/A
JO - NJAS IMPACT IN AGRICULTURAL AND LIFE SCIENCES
JF - NJAS IMPACT IN AGRICULTURAL AND LIFE SCIENCES
ER -