Jubilee Justice is a cooperative that helps Black farming communities practice regenerative agriculture. The organization harkens back to the legacy of practices used in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Konda Mason, President and Co- Founder of Jubilee Justice, a U.S.-based nonprofit organization headquartered in Louisiana, has described her recent visit to Liberia as "life-changing," praising the ...
Bernard Winn, Jubilee Justice’s operations manager. (Photo courtesy of The Laura Flanders Show) By signing up, you confirm that you are over the age of 16 and agree to receive occasional promotional ...
A new day has dawned for Jubilee Justice after the Keller Family, owners of Inglewood Farm, transferred ownership of 17 acres to the non-profit that helps Black farmers become more self-sufficient ...
Over the last 100 years, the number of Black farmers has dropped precipitously. Most estimates report that Black farmers have lost more than 12 million acres of land in the last century, or 90 percent ...
The opening of the Jubilee Justice Specialty Foods and Rice Mill is the culmination of a successful rice experiment benefitting a collective of Black farmers from across the South. The project ...
Dr. Chavonda Jacobs-Young was energized by what she saw happening with the non-profit Jubilee Justice and their farming operation on the Old Baton Rouge Highway south of Alexandria. Jacobs-Young, the ...
Can rice be grown in the southern United States using much less water with the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) method? That's the question Konda Mason sought to answer when she leased two acres ...
Konda Mason has always understood the importance of land. Her grandfather left Alabama in the middle of the night when her dad was a baby, afraid he was going to be lynched because he owned property ...
Out of the soil of rural Louisiana, a new model for food, farming, and restorative economics. Bernard Winn, Jubilee Justice’s operations manager.(Photo courtesy of The Laura Flanders Show) How do you ...
How do you nurture the soil, feed hungry bodies, and heal hurt people and places in these stressed-out times? In Central Louisiana, a network of Black farmers just may be showing how. They’re engaged ...