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Building a Food Movement: Building a Food Movement:

Building a Food Movement: - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2018-12-06

Building a Food Movement: - PPT Presentation

M innesota Food Charter Network story W here are we going Background what is the MN Food Charter How did we get here Movement building why the Minnesota Food Charter Network Application ID: 737002

network food healthy charter food network charter healthy access health safe minnesota affordable reliable amp building time movement hasn

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Building a Food Movement:

Minnesota Food Charter Network storySlide2

W

here are we going?

Background: what is the MN Food Charter? How did we get here?

Movement building

: why the Minnesota Food Charter Network?

Application: What’s worked?  What hasn’t? Considerations for our friendly neighbors to the EastDiscussion: Q & ASlide3

What do you want to learn?

?

Why did you choose this breakout session?

What question or questions are you hoping to get answered as we share our Minnesota Food Charter Network story? Slide4

What is it?

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide5

Goals of

Charter

Begin with the end in mind.Slide6

How did we get here?Slide7

engagementSlide8

strategies

99

Food skills

Food accessibility

Food availability

Food affordability

Food infrastructureSlide9
Slide10

equity

core value Slide11

We know that health is determined not just by access to high quality health care but also by healthy social, economic, and environmental conditions — conditions that we can influence with the program and policy choices that we make…It will take a commitment from…our society, not just those in the health care and public health fields, to achieve this public health goal of health equity.”

http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/chs/healthequity/ahe_leg_report_020414.pdfSlide12

Craft broad, intersectional policy solutions•Forge partnerships across urban and rural communities

•Support indigenous and community leadership through small business financing and community capacity building

Advocate for labor rights and a more balanced ownership of the food system.

•Invest in immediate solutions in our communities, schools, and farms.

Offer tools and resources to guide the creation of racially equitable solutionsSlide13

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide14

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide15

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide16

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide17

Reliable access to safe, healthy, affordable food for allSlide18

Pair-share

?

What key learnings do you have so far in this presentation

?

What will you take with you? Slide19

W

here are we going?

Background

:

what is the MN Food Charter? How did we get here?

Movement building: why the Minnesota Food Charter Network?Application: What’s worked?  What hasn’t? Considerations for our friendly neighbors to the East

Discussion

:

Q & ASlide20

The Minnesota Food Charter Network is a...

Social generative network

Collective Impact NetworkSlide21
Slide22

Thinking like a network

http://interactioninstitute.org/thinking-like-a-network/Slide23
Slide24

Why a Network?Slide25

Why a Network?Slide26

60 local and regional food networks statewide

Why a Network?Slide27
Slide28
Slide29
Slide30

W

here are we going?

Background

:

what is the MN Food Charter? How did we get here?

Movement building: why the Minnesota Food Charter Network?Application: What’s worked?  What hasn’t? Considerations for our friendly neighbors to the East

Discussion

:

Q & ASlide31

Strengths

Visionary outcome

Robust engagement process

Multiple funders

Social generative network structure

Trusting relationships built over timeSlide32

visionary outcome

healthy food access for all

...Slide33

visionary outcome

Frames issues in ways that many sectors understand and commit to

Unites people around an issue that affects us all

healthy food access for allSlide34

Tensions & Challenges

Hard compromises are a fact

Inclusion is bounded by budget, time, and capacity

Systems change takes time

Don’t be afraid to challenge assumptions: YOURS

Trusting relationships built over timeSlide35

Our recommendations

Begin with the end in mind

Healthy food access is a unifying frame

Equity must be intentional and authentic

Create an atmosphere of experimentation and participation.

Get broad-based buy-in early

Process matters (e.g. methodology, rigor, communications, discipline)Slide36

Pair-share

?

What key learnings do you have now

?

What will you take with you? Slide37

Q & A Slide38

Contact info

Michael DahlEmail: dahl0032@umn.edu Phone: (651) 336-5902

Stephanie Heim

Email:

heim0106@umn.edu

Phone: (507) 252-6520mnfoodcharter.com