Steffanie Scott

Professor, Department of Geography & Environmental Management University of Waterloo

  • Waterloo ON

Leading international scholar on food security, food system change, and COVID-19 impacts on the food suppy.

Contact

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Biography

Steffanie Scott is co-investigator on a study of the food security consequences of COVID-19 and countermeasures in China and Canada. Dr Scott’s reputation as a leading international scholar on food security and food system change in China is confirmed by the recent release of her co-authored book, Organic Food and Farming in China: Top-down and Bottom Up Ecological Initiatives. She led the Canadian Association for Food Studies (2012-14) and was inaugural co-chair of the Waterloo Region Food System Roundtable. She co-founded the LinkedIn group, “China’s Changing Food System” and teaches on sustainable food systems and development studies. Steffanie is principal investigator for several research projects on China's Changing Food System, Ecological Agriculture in China, and Our Food Future--Waterloo Region.

Industry Expertise

Research
Agriculture and Farming
Food Production
Food Distribution
Food and Beverages
Environmental Services
Education/Learning
Health and Wellness
Food Processing
Public Policy
Women
Social Services

Areas of Expertise

COVID-19 (Coronavirus)
China
Canada
Food Access
Local Food Systems
Agriculture
Farming
Sustainable Agriculture
Organic Food
Food Agriculture & Environment
Food Policy
Food System Sustainability
Community Development and Social Justice
Sustainable Development
Economic Development
International Development
Environmental Health
Gardening
Rural Issues
Food System Change
Sustainable Communities
Policy Analysis
Equity and Human Rights
Social Activism
Social Movements
Urban Development
Enviromental Justice
Environmenal Education
Food

Accomplishments

SSHRC New Frontiers in Research Fund—Rapid Response

Assessing and Mitigating the Food Security Consequences of COVID-19 in China; (2020-22), Co-applicant

SSHRC Partnership Development Grant

Using Agroecology to Advance Sustainable Development Goals in China: Pathways of Transition Towards a Sustainable Food System; (2019-21)

University of Waterloo International Partnership Research Grant

Pathways of Transition Towards a Sustainable Food System: Scaling Out Agroecology Practices in China (2017-18)

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Education

The University of British Columbia

Ph.D.

Geography

2001

University of Guelph

M.A.

Sociology and International Development

1995

Simon Fraser University

B.A.

Geography & Latin American Studies; Certificate in Chinese Studies

1993

Activities and Societies: Latin American Studies & Geography

Affiliations

  • University of Waterloo Faculty of Environment
  • Sustain Ontario
  • Canadian Organic Growers
  • Organic Council of Ontario
  • Canadian Association of Food Studies
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Languages

  • Spanish

Media Appearances

A recipe for safe food in Vietnam

University of Waterloo  online

2012-01-01

Few things are more basic than food. And few things are more multi-faceted, says Steffanie Scott, a professor in geography jointly appointed to environment and resource studies, who studies changing food systems in Vietnam. “Food production takes so many forms, from subsistence agriculture to ultra-modern industrial food supply chains. And it brings in so many issues — social inequalities, rural transformation, health, and the environment.”

All over the world, Scott says, agriculture and food production are in a state of massive and rapid change — and this includes Vietnam, where land reforms in the 1980s changed the system from collective to individual farming. The transformation spurred an economic boom, but it also brought problems.

For example, Vietnamese consumers worry about pesticide residues in foods. Farmers have been given more decision-making power, but little guidance on how to use their resources. “They might assume the more pesticides you use, the better your productivity, without thinking of the health and environmental impacts,” Scott says.

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Event Appearances

Household Patronage and Participation in Nanjing’s Informal Food Economy

Informality and the urban food system: policy, practice and inclusive growth through a food lens Symposium  Capetown, South Africa

2016-02-15

Ecological Agriculture in China: Government-led versus grassroots initiatives

Cases and Frameworks for the Dissemination of Ecological Agriculture and CSAs in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan workshop  Hong Kong

2015-03-21

Forging new interfaces between ‘feeders’ and ‘eaters’: Alternative food networks in China

Food and Sustainability: Production, Consumption and Food Relations in Asia Conference  City University of Hong Kong

2014-10-14

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Articles

Multifunctionality and agrarian transition in alternative agro‐food production in the global South: The case of organic shrimp certification in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

Asia Pacific Viewpoint

2016

Processes of globalisation in the conventional food provision system have had widespread negative impacts on small-scale farmers. Yet, alternative food networks, which are characterised by more sustainable production/consumption practices and fairer trade relations, have increasingly been 'going global' and, in the process, have been integrating small-scale farms in the South. One such high-value export-led commodity is certified organic shrimp. International third-party certification schemes are becoming popular as a ...

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The convergence of alternative food networks within “rural development” initiatives: the case of the New Rural Reconstruction Movement in China

Local Environment

2015

Rural sociologists and geographers have conceptualised different rural development trajectories including “the agri-industrial model”,“the post-productivist model” and “the rural development model”. Alternative food networks (AFNs) are increasingly recognised as a “forerunner” and a critical component of the emerging “rural development model” in the West. Meanwhile, Marsden and Franklin [2013. Replacing neoliberalism: theoretical implications of the rise of local food movements.

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Characterizing alternative food networks in China

Agriculture and Human Values

2015

Amid the many food safety scandals that have erupted in recent years, Chinese food activists and consumers are turning to the creation of alternative food networks (AFNs) to ensure better control over their food. These Chinese AFNs have not been documented in the growing literature on food studies. Based on in-depth interviews and case studies, this paper documents and develops a typology of AFNs in China, including community supported agriculture, farmers' markets, buying clubs, and recreational garden plot rentals ...

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