Organic2020
In 2001, a very successful Organic 2020 conference was held at Unitec, Auckland. Below are the proceedings of that conference.
| Description |
Web
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PDF
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| GREEN PARTY SPOKESPERSON FOR AGRICULTURE, EDUCATION AND BIOSECURITY Ian Ewen-Street MP | link | |
| PESTICIDAL (GM) CROPS AND ORGANIC FARMING E. Ann Clark, Plant Agriculture, University of Guelph, Canada | link | |
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WORKING WITH PROCESSES OF CHANGE, PARTICULARLY PSYCHOLOGICAL PROCESSES, WHEN
IMPLEMENTING ORGANIC FARMING. Prof. Stuart B. Hill, Foundation Chair of Social Ecology, University of Western Sydney, Australia |
link | |
| EFFECTING CHANGE Scott Kinnear - Chair of Organic Federation of Australia | link | |
| THE PROFITABILITY OF ORGANIC DAIRY FARMING Hella Bauer-Eden | link | |
| SAVING WHAT SEED IS LEFT Kay Baxter | link | |
| ORGANICS & AQUACULTURE Dr Sean Handley NIWA Nelson | link | |
| MANAGING THE TRANSITION FROM CONVENTIONAL TO ORGANIC FARMING Terry Kelly, Gretchen Gempton, & Alan Palmer Institute of Natural Resources, Massey University, New Zealand | link | |
| URBAN AGRICULTURE IN AUCKLAND Betsy Kettle | link | |
| DAIRY FARMS IN TRANSITION: PAIRED FARM STUDY IN NEW ZEALAND Neil MacGregor and Alan S. Palmer, Massey University | link | |
| CONVERSION Seagar Mason | link | |
| ORGANIC VITICULTURE James Millton. The Millton Vineyard, Manutuke, Poverty Bay | link | |
| WORKSHOP PASTORAL/ANIMAL Steph Mitchell | link | |
| A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE THROUGH CO-OPERATION, COMMUNICATION AND CONSUMERS John Pearce, Shelly Beach Farms | link | |
| SUSTAINABILITY AND COMMUNITY SUPPORTED AGRICULTURE FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF A SMALLHOLDER Joe Polaischer | link | |
| INVESTIGATING THE MARKET FOR ORGANIC FOOD: DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND AND THE WORLD Margaret Ritchie, Hugh Campbell and Leda Sivak, Dept of Anthropology, University of Otago | link | |
| IS GENETIC ENGINEERING A BIOTECH (REVOLUTION)? Tee Rogers-Hayden* Geography and Health Development and Policy, University of Waikato, Hamilton. | link | |
| ORGANIC VITICULTURE & WINEMAKING Kingsley Tobin, Kingsley Estate Vineyard, Hawkes Bay | link | |
| PESTICIDES IN FOOD: WHY GO ORGANIC An analysis of New Zealand's latest Total Diet Survey Alison White, Pesticide Action Network NZ/ Safe Food Campaign NZ, Wellington | link | |
| PERCEPTIONS OF THE ORGANIC INDUSTRY TOWARDS GENETIC ENGINEERING Anita Wreford, Terry Kelly, & John Holland, Institute of Natural Resources Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand | link | |
| ORGANICS BY 2020 - A PERSPECTIVE FROM URBAN DWELLERS, Pat Wright, Motueka | link |
Vision Conference 2002
In 1999 the Soil and Health Association of New Zealand launched the idea of Organic 2020 – a movement to create an organic New Zealand within twenty years. Much support was generated for the idea over a short period. In the last 12 months, the moment for such a vision has continued to ripen, partly in response to the handling of the issues of genetic engineering by the Royal Commission and the Government.What was clearly needed in 2002 was detailed work on the details of the vision for an organic New Zealand. With this in mind, Soil and Health dedicated their biannual conference to crafting the detail of Organic 2020.
Eighty people came together for three days at the Aotea Centre in Auckland. They came from all over the country, some representing organisations, more as informal representatives of local groups and communities. Between them, they brought a full range of perspectives on what the vision could look like and what would be needed to achieve it.
Report of the vision conference held 2-4 May 2002, Aotea Centre, Auckland (PDF 464Kb)
2003 Soil & Health National Conference
“Organic 2020 – Organic Solutions”
The 2003 Conference was hosted by CPIT in Christchurch. Guest speaker at the Conference was Professor Stuart Hill. Stuart works for the School of Social Ecology & Lifelong Learning at the University of Western Sydney-Hawkesbury. He was a thoroughly delightful and insightful speaker who entertained, enlightened and inspired his audience. Stuart has provided us with some of his previously presented papers:- A Social Ecology Framework For Achieving An Organic New Zealand By 2020
- Camping To Change The World
- Conservation Challenges and Opportunities for the Future
- From Shallow To Deep Organics
- Guidelines for finding & choosing ecologically sustainable 'solutions' to natural resource problems
- Health, Food and The Right to Choose
- More On A Framework for Changing
- Social Ecology: A Blend Of Science And Subtleties
- Social Ecology As Future Stories: An Australian Perspective
- Working with Processes of Change, Particularly Psychological Processes, when Implementing Organic Farming







