All posts by sraja

Research Article: Equitable Food Value Chains through Collaborative Action

Food system practitioners and scholars are increasingly interested in applying collective and place-based efforts to create equitable food systems. How well do such efforts work? A team from the UB Food Lab, led by Dr. Micaela Lipman, explores this question in a paper about Buffalo, NY. Drawing on com­munity coalition action theory (CCAT), the authors explore the potential for enhancing food equity through collaborative action across the food value chain. Through a case study of a collaborative initi­ative to promote equitable food systems, they document the possibilities and pitfalls of collabo­rative, cohort-based efforts within the inequitable landscape of Buffalo, New York (NY). The paper relies on mixed-methods data that include key informant interviews, participant observations, and surveys of organizations that participated in the Buffalo Community Food System Grant program. Corroborating prior research, the authors report that initia­tives that seek to foster collective action offer unique possibilities for food equity, as well as some key limitations, especially within the context of a racialized food environment. Strengthening food systems by investing in relationships across food value chains opens new avenues for collec­tive action. To promote food equity, new forms of collective action, including functional relationships across the value chain, must address deeper struc­tural imbalances in the food system, such as those resulting from structural racism.

Article is open access and available through JAFSCD.

Citation: Lipman, M., Griffin, D., Woyciesjes, E., Hall, G., & Raja, S. (2025). Equitable food value chains through collaborative action [in an inequitable landscape]: Insights from Buffalo, New York. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development14(1), 207–226. https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2025.141.019

Social, political, and administrative violence results in the death of Nurul Amin Shah Alam: Call to Action

After 15 months as a refugee in the USA, 12 months wrongfully incarcerated, Mr. Nurul Amin Shah Alam died in the holy month of Ramadan.

Mr. Shah Alam, a member of the Muslim Rohingya community in Buffalo, NY, was resettled to the US in December 2024. He was wrongfully incarcerated on February 15, 2025, released on February 19, 2026, reported missing on February 22, 2026, and found dead on February 24, 2026, as reported by The Investigative Post. His brief time in the US was spent navigating a new city and multiple public and civic organizations in a quest for a healthy, stable life. This quest was abruptly ended by an ugly confluence of social, administrative, and political violence. 

As of the writing of this article, the Erie County Medical Examiner has reported that the cause of Mr. Shah Alam’s death has not been released. However, such a medical or clinical view of the human condition overlooks all the ways in which refugees are brought into the US, resettled, and are effectively “let die.” Indeed, our research focused on Buffalo and Erie County has time and again documented all the ways in which the resettlement process–starting with the immediate resettlement period of 90 days when a refugee arrives in the US and over their life course–does not work.

As a group of Buffalo-based action-researchers, community organizers, and community residents committed to health justice, we share this brief to summarize how social, political, and administrative violence ended Mr. Shah Alam’s life, and call on policymakers to take action to ensure justice for his family and prevent future tragedies. 

Our team at the UB Food Lab, community partners, faculty partners, and allies call on policy leaders and the broader community to take action to ensure that Mr. Shah Alam’s family receives justice and that future tragedies are prevented.

A brief report and call to action are pasted below and are available on this public Google Doc. 

Please note that the call to action is a collaborative effort, and it may be updated as additional information is released. All modifications will be dated. 

 Last updated: February 28, 2026

Buffalo Resource Alert: COVID-19

From Buffalo Food Equity  Network + Soul Fire Farm, Announced March 20, 2020

Ask a Sista Farmer
Are you ready to grow your own food and medicine for self-reliance and community resilience? Every Friday, experienced Black womxn* farmers answer your call-in questions about gardening, livestock, agroforestry, plant medicine, and food preservation. 

Fridays, 4:00-4:40 Eastern**
On Zoom @ https://zoom.us/j/803350514 or 646-876-9923 Meeting ID: 803 350 514
On Facebook Live @ https://www.facebook.com/soulfirefarm/
Event Page: https://www.facebook.com/events/539087153384648/

Rotating Hosts
Leah Penniman, Soul Fire Farm http://www.soulfirefarm.org/meet-the-farmers/
Germaine Jenkins, Fresh Future Farm https://www.freshfuturefarm.org/about-us
Raven A. Blake, Love Fed New Haven https://lovefednewhaven.org/our-team
Keisha Cameron, High Hog Farm https://www.facebook.com/highhogfarm/

This show centers the voices of Black, Indigenous, People-of-Color, Queer, Trans*, Disabled, Immigrant, and Poor communities. Everyone is welcome to listen, but please make space for centered folks to speak. Thank you. 

To free ourselves we must feed ourselves!
*Sista and womxn includes trans* and nonbinary folks
**March 27, April 3, 10, 17, 24, May 1 and we will see what’s needed after that!
***Event is FREE but please consider donating to a BIPOC farmer near you as an act of solidarity