Claire Rousell and Brittany Kesselman created a visual essay which depicts the impact of colonialism and colonialities on people’s relationship with plants.

The essay was published in October 2024 by the Grassroots Platform of the Journal of Political Ecology. Click here to see the visual essay and read the abstract below.

Abstract
Our graphic grew out of a project called ‘Decolonising food for health and sustainability’ in Johannesburg, South Africa. The project recognised that being able to grow the indigenous plants that people traditionally used for food and medicine could help communities to enjoy greater food sovereignty and more control over their own health. The graphic seeks to tell the complex story of the historical and ongoing negative impacts of colonialism in a simple and powerful way. The accompanying text explains some of the ways colonialism disrupted Indigenous people’s relationship with plants, and how these processes and power relations continue to underpin South Africa’s unhealthy and unsustainable food system.