Open Conference ATTER Network
8 avril 2025
2nd Open Conference ATTER Network
ULB BrusselsOn 8 April, the members of the ATTER network invite you to their Open Conference in Brussels. This is an opportunity to discover transition paths for European food systems rooted in France, Italy, the United Kingdom, Brazil and the United States.
To join us, receive the programme and practical information : fill in the registration form
ATTER (Agroecological Transition of TERritorial food systems) is an EU-funded project aimed at intensifying agroecological transitions for territorial food systems through cross-case studies. It is based on 16 territorial case studies anchored in five countries (France, Italy, the United Kingdom, Brazil and the United States) and on 19 participating organisations.
During this conference, speakers from the ATTER network will share a review of the cross-cutting analyses and comparative perspectives of the 16 rural and urban study areas in their 5 countries and will open the debate on the issues that need to be tackled collectively.
All participants will be invited to share their experiences around three key questions, in interactive parallel sessions :
- the role of civil society in agri-food transitions,
- the construction of inclusive spaces for debate
- examples of inspiring public policies.
The future of the network and its expansion will also be discussed.
Whether you are a researcher, citizen, representative of civil society, public policy or agricultural and food sector actor, this open conference of the ATTER network is a rare opportunity to share your analyses, visions and points of view with a wide variety of interlocutors from different countries ; and to discover a wide range of actors, initiatives and dynamics/networks rooted in very different national and regional contexts.
Interested ? To receive the programme and all the information : fill in the registration form
Find out more
ATTER is structured around 16 territorial case studies with contrasting socio-agro-ecological characteristics in the 5 participating countries (France, Italy, United Kingdom, Brazil, United States).
ATTER has developed a shared observatory which provides access, via an interactive map, to the identity cards of the 16 regions and their food systems, to the analysis of their trajectories, and to comparative insights with other case studies. Different levels of detail are offered, with a focus on key initiatives and project-related events, such as the ‘cross-fertilisation workshops’ organised to encourage direct exchanges between two case studies.