relation: https://orgprints.org/id/eprint/33250/ title: Hurricane María: An Agroecological Turning Point for Puerto Rico? creator: Félix, Georges F. creator: Holt-Giménez, Eric subject: Farming Systems subject: Social aspects subject: Food systems subject: Policy environments and social economy subject: Latin America description: When Hurricane María tore through Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, it left 17 dead, 11,000 seeking shelter, and the island’s 3.4 million people without power, water, or fresh food supplies.i It also ripped off the democratic veneer of the US’ “commonwealth,” revealing the structural vulnerability of an island that has been colonized for over half a millennium. Disasters tend to unmask both unsustainable practices and inequitable relations of power. But they can also unleash the power of solidarity and self-governance as communities—abandoned by their governments and preyed upon by disaster capitalists—come together in unexpected ways. In the aftermath of Puerto Rico’s worst social, economic and environmental catastrophe, the Puerto Rican food sovereignty movement is using agroecology to reconstruct the island’s beleaguered food system. date: 2017-11 type: Working paper type: NonPeerReviewed format: application/pdf language: en identifier: /id/eprint/33250/1/backgrounder%20PR.pdf identifier: Félix, Georges F. and Holt-Giménez, Eric (2017) Hurricane María: An Agroecological Turning Point for Puerto Rico? Food First Backgrounder, no. Volume 23, Number 4, Food First .