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kottke.org Outside My Window | A Blog of Birds & Nature with Kate St. John Via Negativa The Wallflower Digest baty.net Miskatonic University Press | William Denton Transactions with Beauty Britney Winthrope Z1NZ0L1N Amerpie by Lou Plummer 75CentralPhotography Home :: Sacha Chua Blog – Harold Jarche Doug Jones Tom Van Winkle's Return to Gaming Adactio: Jeremy Keith ooh.directory: a place to find good blogs that interest you Sal's whygodwhy – idk! fine! whatever! who cares! shut up! uncountable thoughts Murmurs Dr Robert N. Winter Who's the Real Loser? Shady Characters Ludicity Notes Without a Thesis Robin Monks - Technologist, AI/ML, Healthtech David Smith, Independent iOS Developer Homepage - blakewatson.com Ploum.net Oatmeal Midnight Reading oh, hey Brian | Brian Bennett blog 2026 | baccyflap.com - a delicate blend of bakelite and fear Our Adventures in Japan Jack's Space | Everything happens for the best Matt Lakeman jzhao.xyz Home - Stephanie Stimac's Blog マリウス Gingerly thoughts on ecology, culture, travel, photography, walking and other ephemera @Kevuhnn / 📸 / 📚 / 🇨🇦 blast-o-rama. Quiet System - sink on uwu SchwarzTech Home ophanim's chariot Navendu Pottekkat - The Open Source Absolutist …time is what you make of it… Ron Seems Sentient Stuffed Crocodile Notes Sympolymathesy, by Chris Krycho Hosentaschenblog Charlie's Diary meyerweb.com Paul Johnson Refugio Norte linkedlist → bits and bytes about the Web New Ideas Blog - Gustavo Ribeiro Marius Masalar Mi blog Domain registered at WHC.ca Tyler Hellard - Pop Loser cedmax Jean Kapsa https://www.feadin.eu/en/ Garbage Collector Brian DeVries Grant Petersen's Blog The Artist’s Notebook Dan Cohen – Vice Provost, Dean, and Professor at Northeastern University 12XU | Verspannungsmusik! denisdefreyne.com Alex – Le site Internet d'Alex Sirac. cultural snow fLaMEd fury homepage A Shroud of Thoughts Ryan Reid Illustration + Design Don't Worry About the Vase Amy Goodchild Songs on the Security of Networks Protesilaos, also known as “Prot” GitHub - uxai/non-profit-bloggers: A repository of blogs by bloggers who blog for the joy of writing. 👋 Hi! Joe Van Cleave's Blog Amit Gawande Paul's Beer & Travel Blog Steve Best West Coast Stat Views (on Observational Epidemiology and more) Darknet Diaries – True stories from the dark side of the Internet. SEAN BONNER Artist, Instructor, using only Free/Libre and Open-Source software since 2009. Along the Ray Chris Aldrich | BoffoSocko 印记 | Live a life you will remember. Herman's blog
Welcome | Chris Smaje
hello@manuel · 2023-11-09 · via Ye Olde Blogroll — Firehose

Hi, and welcome to my site. I’m an author, small-scale farmer and sometime academic social scientist, writing about this moment of vast change as the dynamics of climate, energy, politics and natural ecosystems upend familiar assumptions about how the world is supposed to work. I’ve written two books, numerous articles and a long-running blog that looks at all this from a variety of angles, but mostly grounded in the belief that we need to develop low-energy localisms that give people the means to make a practical livelihood from their surrounding ecological base – a small farm future, the title of my first book.

Do have a look around my site, and contribute to the discussion if you wish.

Please note that although my blog is long-running, this is a new site as of June 2023 and there are parts of it that I’m still building, so you may find that the content is cursory in places.

Chris

Finding Lights in a Dark Age

Finding Lights in a Dark Age

Sharing Land, Work and Craft

‘The source of our collective insecurity has its roots in the land – and has erected fences to keep us out. Chris Smaje’s erudite and compassionate investigation shows that our own wellbeing cannot be secured without Earth’s. He offers a vision for how we, the people, can secure our future by giving the labour of our bodies to the land and to each other. In a time of warring narratives, Smaje’s call for sovereignty invites us to tear down the fences that exile us from our own histories.’
Rachel Donald, creator and host, Planet: Critical podcast

My new book Finding Lights in a Dark Age is being published in the UK in October 2025 and the US in November 2025. Global society is unquestionably heading into a period of grave crisis, when the modernist gods of state and market, left-wing and right-wing, will need to be abandoned. …

‘The source of our collective insecurity has its roots in the land – and has erected fences to keep us out. Chris Smaje’s erudite and compassionate investigation shows that our own wellbeing cannot be secured without Earth’s. He offers a vision for how we, the people, can secure our future by giving the labour of our bodies to the land and to each other. In a time of warring narratives, Smaje’s call for sovereignty invites us to tear down the fences that exile us from our own histories.’
Rachel Donald, creator and host, Planet: Critical podcast

My new book, critiquing food techno-fixes and making the case for local food systems

Saying NO to a Farm-Free Future

The Case for an Ecological Food System and Against Manufactured Foods

“Everyone in the food business needs to read this book. If you think the future rests in time-tested local authenticity, Smaje’s arguments sound like affirming angels. If you think the future lies in techno-sophisticated urban manufacturing plants, you owe it to yourself to learn the best arguments from the opposing view.

For many of us in the local authentic food space, George Monbiot is our nemesis in the public debate of food’s future. Will it be local, democratised and heritage driven, or will it be manufactured by techno-sophisticates suddenly converted to humble, charitable ends? Smaje cuts precisely and directly, eviscerating Monbiot with superb and quotable verbalese.  

Never have I enjoyed reading a blow-by-blow narrative as much as this lively and superbly written polemic.”

Joel Salatin, co-founder of Polyface Farm, and author of You Can Farm and Polyface Micro

One of the few voices to challenge The Guardian’s George Monbiot on the future of food and farming (and the restoration of nature) is academic, farmer and author of A Small Farm Future Chris Smaje. In Saying NO to a Farm-Free Future, Smaje presents his defense of small-scale farming and a robust critique of …

“Everyone in the food business needs to read this book. If you think the future rests in time-tested local authenticity, Smaje’s arguments sound like affirming angels. If you think the future lies in techno-sophisticated urban manufacturing plants, you owe it to yourself to learn the best arguments from the opposing view.

For many of us in the local authentic food space, George Monbiot is our nemesis in the public debate of food’s future. Will it be local, democratised and heritage driven, or will it be manufactured by techno-sophisticates suddenly converted to humble, charitable ends? Smaje cuts precisely and directly, eviscerating Monbiot with superb and quotable verbalese.  

Never have I enjoyed reading a blow-by-blow narrative as much as this lively and superbly written polemic.”

Joel Salatin, co-founder of Polyface Farm, and author of You Can Farm and Polyface Micro

My first book

A Small Farm Future

Making the Case for a Society Built Around Local Economies, Self-Provisioning, Agricultural Diversity and a Shared Earth

“We are facing an existential crisis with species extinction, climate catastrophes, desertification of soil, disappearance of water, pandemics of infectious and chronic diseases, hunger and malnutrition. Industrialized, globalized agriculture based on the myth that it feeds the world is driving the multiple, interconnected crisis. Eighty percent of the food we eat comes from small farms. Chris Smaje s A Small Farm Future shows that the choice is clear. Either we have a small farm future, or we face collapse and extinction.”

Vandana Shiva, author of Oneness vs. the 1% and Who Really Feeds the World? 

From the back cover: “A Small Farm Future is a ground-breaking debut, destined to become a modern classic – planting a flag at the intersection between economics, agriculture and society during a time of immense crisis. Farmer and social scientist Chris Smaje makes the case for organising human societies around small-scale, …

“We are facing an existential crisis with species extinction, climate catastrophes, desertification of soil, disappearance of water, pandemics of infectious and chronic diseases, hunger and malnutrition. Industrialized, globalized agriculture based on the myth that it feeds the world is driving the multiple, interconnected crisis. Eighty percent of the food we eat comes from small farms. Chris Smaje s A Small Farm Future shows that the choice is clear. Either we have a small farm future, or we face collapse and extinction.”

Vandana Shiva, author of Oneness vs. the 1% and Who Really Feeds the World? 

The Small Farm Future Blog

I’ve been blogging about farming, ecology and politics since 2012. I welcome well-tempered discussion. Please note that if you’re a new commenter, or if you include a lot of links, your comment will go into the moderation queue before publication. I sometimes miss comments in the queue so feel free to nudge me via the Contact Form if your comment fails to appear.

The path ahead

Posted on May 27, 2026 | 24 Comments

Sorry I’ve been so silent here of late. I’ve got a lot of work on various fronts, some of which I may mention here soon, which is keeping me from blogging. But if there’s a Small Farm Future/Dark Age Light hole in your life, do listen in to this Crazy Town podcast I did with Jason Bradford, which was quite a fun conversation. Despite my busy-ness I must confess that I did take a brief holiday in the Scottish Highlands – partly to visit my son who lives there and partly to hike in the mountains, which is something I …

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Food, energy, capitalism, collapse

Posted on April 22, 2026 | 67 Comments

Apologies that I’m not finding much time at the moment to write new blog posts, a situation that will probably continue for a while. Well, here’s one anyway, chiselled out from a couple of hours of idling on the internet recently and trying to catch up on world news by triangulating rather unoriginally between the BBC, Al Jazeera, the London Review of Books and The Guardian. And if triangulating between four sources sounds odd, believe me it’s not as odd as some of the things in the news they’re reporting on. Here, I’m going to make reference to one particular …

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Foragers and farmers: further thoughts on a debate with Tom Murphy

Posted on March 21, 2026 | 127 Comments

Diverting briefly from my blog cycle about my recent book Finding Lights in a Dark Age, here I’m going to continue my polite discussion with Tom Murphy about the human condition past, present and future – and, more specifically, about the place of foraging (gathering and hunting) vis-à-vis farming in it. My thanks to Tom for the discussion, which has helped clarify my thinking. I’m still wrestling with the issues, though, and I think Tom makes a lot of good points. For info, I’m going to be offline during the coming week, but I’ll aim to reply to any comments here …

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An arc of future Earth

Posted on March 11, 2026 | 25 Comments

Continuing my stately progress through my book Finding Lights in a Dark Age, we come next to the Introduction, entitled ‘An Arc of Future Earth’. But first a couple of quick housekeeping notices. Apologies to a couple of commenters whose comments sat for a long while in the moderation queue without me noticing, now approved. I seem to have become increasingly bad at noticing queued comments, replying to emails etc which certainly isn’t through any intention to ignore people. Please accept my past and future apologies for this. I won’t take offence at gentle reminders. A heads up that I …

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