UK | Oxford Real Farming Conference 2026 – Deeper and wider ways of engaging with the land

A view of the Old Town Hall from the stage at ORFC 2026. Photo: Oliver Moore

As a temperature check on where the alternative agri-food movement is in Britain, the Oxford Real Farming Conference is a good barometer. Oliver Moore reports from Oxford.

Listening to the land 

The Oxford Real Farming Conference started 17 years ago as a tiny fringe event offering an alternative to the industry-focussed Oxford Farming Conference. This year’s ORFC, held in the first week of January, was attended by 4,800 people online and in person.

In a surprising and enlivening programme, much space was held for wider, more nuanced and outsider approaches to all aspects of farming and the land. 

It wasn’t just the topics; it was the range of activities—workshops, book readings and author interviews, creative writing classes, morning meditation with Satish Kumar, speed dating, storytelling, film screenings and more. 

There was much on using intuition in our relations with plants and animals, on reanimating indigenous foodways, on being more present in our surroundings, and on reexamining English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish roots, rites and rituals from pre-capitalist and pre-colonial times.

Listening to the Land was one of five main strands of the programme. It carried the momentum of a pre-conference event held the day before in the stunning Wesley Memorial Church: Listening to the Land Day 2026. Here, a couple of hundred people gathered, from Britain and further afield, from Aotearoa (New Zealand) to Turtle Island (North America), seeking to build a more receptive, reciprocal, sometimes even ceremonial space and place in the land, and in our farming ways.

Conscious farmers

ORFC’s opening ceremony was memorable for many things: for dung beetles as inspiration, for the enforced absence of Palestinian farmers due to attend—who were nonetheless cheered for in solidarity—and for the powerful drummers of the Shumei Taiko Ensemble, who are also farmers with a very specific way of growing food.

Part of the Shumei movement, these drummer-farmers focus on nurturing life force in seed, soil, and plants. Indeed for Shumei, the consciousness of the farmer plays a role too. 

Tomi from the Shumei farm in Yatesbury spoke with me. Not only is it no dig and no biocides, it’s also no fertilisers, no compost, and soon no crop rotations at all. “The most important thing is the love and gratitude for the vegetables, nature and everything.” So it’s about sending love –and also “saving seed and continuous cropping” for these practitioners. Even the seeds are grown out in pots of soil, not of compost; as Tomi puts it, “the soil can manage everything.”

The Shumei Taiko Ensemble opening the Listening to the Land Day. Photo: Oliver Moore

Justice and joint struggle

The Justice strand too, felt very strong and present. This strand brought together those from marginalised perspectives—landless and minorities such as black, queer and neurodiverse.

Many of the Justice strand’s events were in the Story Museum, a gorgeous, magical, welcoming place that felt strikingly different to the main venue of the conference: the majestic but forebodingly imperial Oxford Town Hall, with its muskets in glass frames and intricate perfectly plastered enormity.  

Another strand was dedicated to the wider peasant movement working together on the global and local levels under the banner of La Via Campesina and its UK member Land Workers Alliance: from dismantling global trade injustices to “joint struggle” with Palestinian farmers, as Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh, zooming in from Bethlehem, put it, and fighting the far right in farming. 

Some participants came with a critical lens. There were grumblings about how the agroecology movement needs to get its own house in order. While it may have, in La Via Campesina, a movement that is expressly of the global south and its people, one that fights racism and colonial-capitalism, interjectionists pointed out that in western Europe it’s a very white “sector” (the word used specifically), especially in the owning classes, and has some questionable tendencies towards essentialism, and notions of purity, on its edges.

“It’s not the plough, it’s the how”

There was a strand on food and farming policy. Yet it gave surprisingly little attention to how a post-CAP, post-Brexit farm policy is developing and diverging in each of the United Kingdom’s countries (each of which have their own individual ag policies). Instead, glyphosate, Mercosur, technology (e.g. AI, corporate capture) featured strongly.

That said, the occasional sessions with policy makers from government departments were busy with lots of questions from growers and farmers.

The phrase “it’s not the plough, it’s the how” is Patrick Holden’s, an organic farmer in Wales, who is also with the Sustainable Food Trust. It encapsulates well the case for care-full organic farming, while flagging in contrast the use of herbicides in regenerative agriculture –the movement that coined the phrase “it’s not the cow, it’s the how”.   

I came to ORFC seeking deeper explanations—to better understand why hurt people hurt people, and cycles of destruction and extractivism keep happening as we try to feed ourselves. It was a balm to host a post film screening conversation—with an intro in Irish—with Professor Rupa Marya, deftly chaired by Anna Lappé. Our session Farming is Medicine: From Turtle Island to Éire really seemed to move people. There were tears, and long conversations after.

As Rupa put it: “I was inspired to see so many people actively connecting the dots between the genocide in Palestine, the control of our food system and land access, the technofascist expansion of AI and the catastrophe for the environment and civil liberties that brings, and the use of paramilitary in the US to kidnap and murder dissidents. Connecting these dots allows us to come up with comprehensive strategies—across borders and biomes—to build a resistance approach through food, land and care.”

Conclusion

There is in academia the idea that organic farming and food will eventually become just like mainstream farming and food, through a process known as conventionalisation. This means that over time, the inputs, the processes, the routes to market and so on all copy the mainstream. You can see this play out in places like Germany’s Biofach organic trade fair. 

Another view is that the alternative agri-food movement replenishes itself—so while these processes of conventionalisation are happening, a deeper, wider, more diverse and horizontal tendency emerges to replenish the movement too. 

Among other things, the Oxford Real Farming Conference shows that there’s more to the movement than mere conventionalisation. 

The movement is doubling down—it’s attempting to deepen its understanding of the world. And there’s no time like the present for that.

 

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About Oliver Moore 230 Articles

Dr. Oliver Moore has a PhD in the sociology of farming and food, where he specialised in organics and direct sales. He is published in the International Journal of Consumer Studies, International Journal of Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology and the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development. A weekly columnist and contributor with Irish Examiner, he is a regular on Countrywide (Irish farm radio show on the national broadcaster RTE 1) and engages in other communications work around agri-food and rural issues, such as with the soil, permaculture, climate change adaptation and citizen science initiative Grow Observatory . He lectures part time in the Centre for Co-operative Studies UCC.

A propos d'Oliver Moore
Oliver voyage beaucoup moins qu’auparavant, pour ce qui concerne son activité professionnelle. Il peut néanmoins admirer par la fenêtre de son bureau les mésanges charbonnières et les corbeaux perchés au sommet du saule dans le jardin de sa maison au cœur de l’écovillage de Cloughjordan, en Irlande. L’écovillage est un site de 67 acres dans le nord du Tipperary. Il comprend d’espaces boisés, des paysages comestibles, des lieux de vie, d’habitation et de travail, ainsi qu’une ferme appartenant à la communauté. Les jours où il travaille dans le bureau du centre d’entreprise communautaire, il profite d’une vue sur les chevaux, les panneaux solaires, les toilettes sèches et les jardins familiaux. 

Ce bureau au sein de l’écovillage constitue en effet un tiers-lieu de travail accueillant également des collaborateurs des associations Cultivate et Ecolise, ainsi qu’un laboratoire de fabrication (« fab lab »). 

Oliver est membre du conseil d’administration de la ferme communautaire (pour la seconde fois !) et donne également des cours sur le Master en coopératives, agroalimentaire et développement durable à l’University College Cork. Il a une formation en sociologie rurale : son doctorat et les articles qu’il publie dans des journaux scientifiques portent sur ce domaine au sens large.

Il consacre la majorité de son temps de travail à l’ARC 2020. Il collabore avec ARC depuis 2013, date à laquelle l’Irlande a assuré la présidence de l’UE pendant six mois. C’est là qu’il a pu constater l’importance de la politique agroalimentaire et rurale grâce à sa chronique hebdomadaire sur le site d’ARC. Après six mois, il est nommé rédacteur en chef et responsable de la communication, poste qu’il occupe toujours aujourd’hui. Oliver supervise le contenu du site web et des médias sociaux, aide à définir l’orientation de l’organisation et parfois même rédige un article pour le site web. 

À l’époque où on voyageait davantage, il a eu la chance de passer du temps sous les tropiques, où il a aidé des ONG irlandaises de commerce équitable – au Ghana, au Kenya, au Mali, en Inde et au Salvador – à raconter leur histoire.

Il se peut que ces jours-là reviennent. Pour son compte Oliver continuera de préférer naviguer en Europe par bateau, puis en train. Après tout, la France n’est qu’à une nuit de navigation. En attendant, il y a toujours de nombreuses possibilités de bénévolat dans la communauté dans les campagnes du centre de l’Irlande.