OUR COMMITMENTS



We are a group of scholars, based in Europe, whose work coalesces around an interest in the revolutionary potential of the agrarian question of geographies broadly understood as the ‘Global North’, with a particular focus on Europe. These are places where the agrarian land regime is considered settled, ‘mature’ or ‘complete’: our work seeks to problematise these narratives and to suggest the need for a critical reconsideration of the significance of the agrarian question in these societies, particularly in light of ongoing and escalating political turmoil within and about rural landscapes.

Theoretically, we draw on concepts, tools and ideas from the fields of critical agrarian studies, legal geography, anti-colonial Marxism, postcolonial studies and world systems theory among other theoretical traditions. While we are diverse in terms of our disciplinary backgrounds, areas of study, and precise theoretical groundings, we nonetheless share a core set of principles or commitments that are central to the work we do as a collective. 

These are as follows:

  • A commitment to the fundamental requirement of radical land reforms as the basis for socio-ecological transformation.
  • At a time of converging catastrophic crisis, we take seriously the role of theory and ideological struggle, but believe that theory cannot be for the sake of mere debate, the academy or point-scoring. Theory must be informed by praxis and ultimately serve more effective forms of praxis.
  • We situate agrarian struggles over land in global geographies and genealogies of colonialism, racial capitalism and imperialism, and processes of extraction, enclosure, exploitation and expropriation. We conceive of food sovereignty and agroecology as key parts of a broader project of dismantling racial capitalism and its colonial food system. In practice, this means a belief in the need for material solidarity with anti-colonial movements. 
  • We celebrate the agrarian and the rural as a diverse site of political possibility, conviviality and knowledge. At the same time, we highlight the danger of romanticising any idealised rural experience or virtue, preferring instead to centre the emancipatory potential of life in rural places which are entangled with sites, peoples and struggles both in other rural and in urban places. 
  • We recognise the existence of biophysical limits and thresholds in terms of agricultural possibility, whilst rejecting any form of Malthusianism, populationism or engineered asceticism. 
  • We consider the transformation of the way we feed and otherwise provision ourselves from the land towards abundance, justice and liberation to be possible. Yet we emphasise that this change cannot come through changing practices alone. Instead, we centre the need for political economic transformation, institution building, and struggle over state power, that goes beyond reformism in order to cultivate new subjectivities and capacities regarding how we relate to our food, our agriculture, our non-human companion species and each other. This goes hand-in-hand with a commitment to abolishing the systems of violence and oppression that constrain our abilities to build a world in common that is not classed, raced, gendered or otherwise structured by oppression. 
  • To inspire and inform the aforementioned transformations, we are committed to unearthing land-based revolutionary histories, traditions and epistemologies within the Global North that have been expropriated, disciplined and buried under narratives of civilisational progress and industrialisation. In particular, we reject an ecomodernist vision of the rural that either sees no place for farming, or which seeks to further intensify and modernise agriculture in order to ‘spare’ land ‘for nature’.
  • We hold a critical but iterative relationship with existing agricultural technologies which recognises the social relations that have produced them and that they co-produce, and which asserts the need to embed these within democratic institutions. 
  • We acknowledge the incipient possibility of fascism associated with both techno-optimistic, eco-modernist and regressive, neo-Chayanovian visions of rural life, and argues for an agrarian politics that is in solidarity with urgent ongoing liberation struggles associated with the persistence of intersectional oppressions faced by racialized, gendered, queer and neurodivergent people.
  • Building on the work of both existing and historic scholars and organisers, and in the face of ongoing uneven ecological exchange and deeply problematic and violent neo-colonial logics of agricultural development, knowledge dissemination and cultural fetishism, our work recognises the need to take responsibility for our own agrarian questions in the Global North. By taking up this position in institutions and contexts in the imperial core and their settler colonies, we look to hone our approach to these questions in the context of our own polities and landscapes in a way that is both cognizant and celebratory of the realities of agricultural lifeways of producers across the Global South and amongst Indigenous peoples and peasant communities everywhere. 

































© 2025 Root and Branch Collective.