The Landworkers’ Alliance is a union of farmers, growers, foresters and land-based workers.

Feedback for us

If you have any comments, critiques, considerations, compliments, complaints, about anything the Landworkers Alliance is or isn’t up to, do let us know your thought. We love feedback, it keeps a system healthy. Please fill in this quick form.

Membership / Supporter / Donation Queries

Please contact Lauren.Simpson@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk

Requests for work, volunteering or internships

We are currently not recruiting for any roles but please read our newsletters for any announcements. We currently do not offer any volunteer or internship placements directly with the LWA, but keep an eye out in the newsletter or on the forum for any members looking for volunteers or workers.

Academic/Research Enquiries

Please look at the Agroecology Research Collaboration to see if it fits your area of research/work.

Membership Support / Advice

Currently the LWA does not have capacity or resources to help individual members or potential members on their specific projects, farms or programmes. We get a lot of requests for individual support and would love to have the time to respond to each request in full. We are fundraising for a new role for somebody to focus on membership support and services as we have identified it is a gap in our offering so please watch this space. Having said that, if your query is critical and urgent please email info@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk including the word URGENT in the subject header and it will get picked up and we can try our best to help.

Contacting Individual Staff

Please take the time to explore our staff page here to see who the most relevant contact for your enquiry is.

Our addresses format is firstname.lastname@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk

Please bear in mind we all work part time and have limited capacity to respond to enquiries outside our core areas of work.

You can also find information under the About Us header about branch and regional organising, and identity groups within the LWA membership.

Press/Media Enquiries:

For any queries relating to press please email press@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk

Merchandise/calendar Enquiries

For any enquiries to do with shop sales including the calendar please email merchandise@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk

To Include an Item in Our Newsletter:

You can fill in this quick form to submit it to be included in the next bulletin/newsletter. The deadline to submit is the end of Friday each week for the following week’s member bulletin. With the same form you can also submit to the monthly non-member newsletter which goes out in the first week of the month.

All Other Enquiries:

For any other enquiries that are URGENT please email info@staging.landworkersalliance.org.uk with the word ‘urgent’ in the subject header and we will do our best to help.

Follow Us

Reflections on the India farmers movement from a UK horticulture farmer. 

Reflections on the India farmers movement from a UK horticulture farmer. 
25/01/2021 Steph Wetherell
In Blog, News

In this blog, LWA’s Mobilisation and Engagement Coordinator Humphrey Lloyd, a horticulture farmer running a market garden in Bristol, reflects on the India farmers movement and why their protests are so important. 

Central to the concerns of the farmers who are camping in and around Delhi through the cold winter weather is the threat to farm gate prices, agricultural wages and ultimately a loss of rural livelihoods. For UK horticultural farmers it’s interesting to consider how our sector and our wages have been affected by similar market based reforms to those being contested on the streets of Delhi. 

Here in Britain, supermarket shelves abound with fresh fruit and veg the year round, and food is cheaper by most estimates than all nations on earth bar the USA and Singapore. Whilst this might seem great for consumers, from the perspective of the farmer, the situation is less rosy. Jobs in horticulture, along with the market gardens and orchards, have been in a long term decline, with their productive area declining by 27% since the mid 1980s. This decline is associated with increased integration of UK fruit and veg farms with the world’s largest free trade area, the European Common Market. This is why heavily sprayed French apples are the norm on our supermarket shelves and why our apple growers struggle to make a living from this historic and quintessentially British crop. Currently, primarily rice (paddy) and wheat produce in India receive guaranteed prices in government controlled markets. If these are removed, and the government succeeds in creating a free market across the Indian states, prices will fluctuate and fall, as is common with other crops. Indian farmers will see their bottom line being hit, just as has been the case for UK apple farmers by tariff-free imports from Holland, Germany and northern France. 

Stagnating agricultural wages is another factor. A 2018 report from the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development found that agricultural wages in India were one third that of other household incomes, and protestors are concerned about them dropping still further with the implementation of the three laws. Here in the UK, since the 1940s the Agricultural Wages Board (AWB) had negotiated wages between unions and employers and compensated farm labourers for the difficulty, unsociability and outright danger of their work. This was then abolished in 2013 under the coalition government’s  ‘bonfire of the quangos.’ The spring following the abolition of the AWB, Unite conducted a survey of its rural members and found that only half of them had enjoyed a pay rise in line with inflation.  Leading agricultural policy expert in India, Devinder Sharma, believes incomes for farm workers in real terms have remained stagnant or even declined in recent years. If the situation gets worse they could see the kind of rural-urban exodus that will put more pressure on urban jobs and infrastructure. 40% of the populous nation of India rely on farm labour for employment; a shock to their wages will be a social disaster. 

The abolition of the AWB in Britain was actually supported by the National Farmers Union and barely noticed by wider civil society! The contrast presented by the India resistance is an inspiration. After two months of strikes and nine rounds of negotiations, the government has agreed to temporarily suspend implementation of the three laws and institute a four-person panel to resolve the dispute. Farmers are unconvinced and say the panel is complicit with the government. Today, tractors are streaming into Delhi in their thousands in preparation for a protest rally tomorrow on Indian Republic Day. This commemorates the day that India became a republic after its independence from British colonial rule. British farmers who oppose the neo-colonial food system that dominates the world today, should not only stand with them but take a leaf out of their book. 

Please subscribe to our e-newsletter.

This information will never be shared with a third party