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Agroecology does not have a single definition, as it differs across communities, territories and traditions. However, agroecology can be understood as an approach to food-system development that places peasants (understood as peasant farmers, fishing communities and pastoralists in rural and urban areas) at the center. In the agroecology movement (linked to the food sovereignty movement), peasants are not only the stewards of the land and natural resources, but also play a central role in preserving biodiversity. Agroecology challenges the dominant, intensive system of industrial food production. Due to different pressures, many intergovernmental organizations, private sector entities, research institutes and some NGOs have recognized agroecology, but have reduced it to technological or production practices that fit into the current system of production and consumption. These include damaging practices such as climate-smart agriculture, and the Green and Blue Revolutions, among others. These are not agroecology. A description of agroecology is expressed in some of the principles agreed upon in the final declaration from the International Forum for Agroecology, 27 February 2015, in Nyéléni, Mali: Agroecology
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