
Monday, March 23, 2026 at 3 PM E / 2 PM C / 1 PM M / 12 PM P
Rooted in Resistance: The History of Food Cooperation Among People of the Global Majority
Alannah Hines
The legacy of food and agricultural cooperation among people of the global majority throughout U.S. history is often overlooked. From mutual aid networks and land trusts to farming cooperatives and community-owned grocery stores, Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, and immigrant communities have long used cooperative strategies to reclaim food sovereignty, resist economic exclusion, and build collective resilience.
This session will trace this deep-rooted history beyond the modern food co-op movement, highlighting examples of agricultural cooperatives, community kitchens, and mutual aid food systems shaped by the lived experience and leadership of marginalized communities. Participants will leave with a deeper understanding of the power of cooperation as a tool for liberation, survival, and inspiration to carry this work forward.