
Overview
Background
Kiah Smith is a Sociologist with expertise in environment, sustainable development and food justice. With a strong record of international publications on food justice, food security, climate resilience, financialisation, ethical trade, green economy, sustainable livelihoods, gender empowerment and food system governance, Kiah’s work contributes new understandings of the social dimensions of food system transformation at the intersection of multiple crises. Using mostly qualitative, participatory methodologies (such as action research and future scenario planning), her research emphasises the role that civil society plays in transformative policy making that is systems-focused and inclusive of social-ecological perspectives. For example, her ARC DECRA study - Fair Food, Civil Society and the Sustainable Development Goals - examined how civic stakeholders are able to resist, reshape or redefine what a just and sustainable food system might look like, based on co-design and collaboration with civil society, local government, advocacy groups and grassroots food actors (food hubs, community gardens, and food charities) in Australia. This interdisciplinary research agenda can best be summarised as one where ‘food futures’ are closely connected with ‘deep’ sustainability, rights, justice and empowerment, within the growing field of ‘sustainability transitions’.
Other past and present studies include: Multifunctional horticulture - land, labour and environments; Ethical consumption and COVID; Responsible innovation in digital agriculture; Employment policy and indigenous food sovereignty in remote Australia; Financialisation of food and farmland in Australia; Resilience and governance of Australian food systems during crisis; and Mapping civil society, human rights and the SDGs. Kiah has conducted research in Australia and internationally, she has worked with local NGOs (in Africa and Australia), with the United Nations Research Institute in Geneva, and in multidisciplinary research teams spanning the social and natural sciences both here and abroad. Kiah is also a Future Earth Fellow, treasurer of the Australasian Agrifood Research Network, and executive member of the RC40 on Food and Agriculture in the International Sociological Association. Her work at the nexus of academia and policy/advocacy contributes to the growing movement for the right to food in Australia and globally.
Availability
- Dr Kiah Smith is:
- Not available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
Research interests
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Food Justice
Civic/ alternative food networks; Fair Food organising; Community food policy making; Food citizenship; Social solidarity economy; Environmental justice; Right to food
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Agrifood Political Economy
'Financialisation of Food and Farming' in Australia, with a focus on agribusiness investment in the the North Queensland sugar industry; Supermarket power and industry 'greening'; Food crisis, multiple crises (food, climate, economic); Horticulture and regional development
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Sustainable Development
SDGs; Social dimensions of green economy; UN policy processes; Research translation
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Food systems governance
Resilience of long and short food chains; Adaptive, reflexive governance; Food systems in 'crisis', e.g. flooding, climate change; Food systems transformation; Multi-stakeholder participation and power; climate change
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Gender and Ethical Trade
Fair and ethical trade, e.g. 'ethical consumption and production' networks; Ecofeminism; Smallholder food production/trade in the Global South; Sustainable livelihoods Gender empowerment; Conventions, standards, multistakeholder regulation
Research impacts
Over the past decade, Kiah has collaborated with FIAN International on the right to food, UN Women on their ‘Feminist Plan for Sustainability and Social Justice’, UNRISD programmes on ‘A new eco-social contract’ and ‘Localising the SDGs’, and Future Earth through her ‘Fair Food Futures’ podcast and animation. She has provided expertise to global food security policy making through participation in the UN High Level Panel on the Sustainable Development Goals (2018), UN Food Systems Summit Civic Dialogues (2021), 2022 People’s Summit , and the UN SDG Summit in 2023.
Kiah's research has informed submissions to the Australian government, including to the Senate inquiry on resilience and flooding (2013), Australia's progress on the SDGs (2018), Financial Investment (2020), Food Pricing and Food Security in Remote Indigenous Communities (2020), and Food Security (2022), as well as to civic initiatives such as the AFSA People’s Food Plan (2023) and CSIRO's discussion paper on ‘Transforming Australian Food Systems’ (2022). At the Centre for Policy Futures, Kiah’s expertise in justice, rights and empowerment will contribute across the focal areas, and help to build the Centre’s capacity for research as social action, non-traditional research translation and impact, and policy engagement with the SDGs.
Works
Search Professor Kiah Smith’s works on UQ eSpace
2011
Other Outputs
Contesting 'ethicality': Ethical trade, gender and sustainable livelihoods for smallholder farmers in Kenya
Kiah Smith (2011). Contesting 'ethicality': Ethical trade, gender and sustainable livelihoods for smallholder farmers in Kenya. PhD Thesis, School of Social Science, The University of Queensland.
2010
Conference Publication
The Globally-engaged Family Farmer: Understanding a New, Transnational, Cosmopolitan Actor
Richards, C., Cheshire, L., Lawrence, G., Smith, K., Skrbis, Z. and Woods, M. (2010). The Globally-engaged Family Farmer: Understanding a New, Transnational, Cosmopolitan Actor. XVII Conference of the Australasian Agri-food Research Network, Gippsland, VIC Australia, 29 November - 1 December 2010.
2010
Journal Article
Food risks, old and new demographic characteristics and perceptions of food additives, regulation and contamination in Australia
Buchler, Sandra, Smith, Kiah and Lawrence, Geoffrey (2010). Food risks, old and new demographic characteristics and perceptions of food additives, regulation and contamination in Australia. Journal of Sociology, 46 (4), 353-374. doi: 10.1177/1440783310384449
2010
Journal Article
Supermarkets’ governance of the agri-food supply chain: Is the ‘corporate-environmental’ food regime evident in Australia?
Smith, Kiah, Lawrence, Geoffrey and Richards, Carol (2010). Supermarkets’ governance of the agri-food supply chain: Is the ‘corporate-environmental’ food regime evident in Australia?. International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food, 17 (2), 140-161.
2008
Conference Publication
Safety, Quality and the Future of Food: Consumer Perspectives of Traditional and Modern Food Risks
Buchler, S., Lawrence, G. and Smith, K. (2008). Safety, Quality and the Future of Food: Consumer Perspectives of Traditional and Modern Food Risks. XV Conference of the Australasian Agri-food Research Network, Sydney, NSW Australia, 26-28 November 2008.
2007
Conference Publication
FLUO 25-The development of improved lithium-ion battery electrolytes containing fluorinated cosolvents
Smart, Marshall C., Smith, Kiah, Bhalla, Pooja, Hu, Jinbo, Prakash, G. K. Surya, Whitacre, Jay F. and Bugga, Ratnakumar V. (2007). FLUO 25-The development of improved lithium-ion battery electrolytes containing fluorinated cosolvents. 233rd National Meeting of the Cellulose-and-Renewable-Materials-Division of the American-Chemical-Society (ACS), Chicago Il, Mar 25-29, 2007. WASHINGTON: AMER CHEMICAL SOC.
2006
Conference Publication
Australia's Third Food Regime? Global versus National Trends
Lawrence, G. and Smith, K. (2006). Australia's Third Food Regime? Global versus National Trends. XIII Conference of the Australasian Agri-food Research Network, Dunedin, New Zealand, 27-30 November 2006.
2006
Conference Publication
Food Safety Regulation in Australia: an Agenda for Agri-food Research
Lawrence, G., Burch, D. and Smith, K. (2006). Food Safety Regulation in Australia: an Agenda for Agri-food Research. XII Conference of the Australasian Agri-food Research Network, Dunedin, New Zealand, 27-30 November 2006.
2006
Book Chapter
Audit Cultures and the Antipodes: The Implications of EurepGAP for New Zealand and Australian Agri-food Industries
Campbell, Hugh, Lawrence, Geofffrey and Smith, Kiah (2006). Audit Cultures and the Antipodes: The Implications of EurepGAP for New Zealand and Australian Agri-food Industries. Between the Local and the Global: confronting complexity in the contemporary Agri-food sector. (pp. 69-94) edited by T. Marsden and J. Murdoch. Oxford, England: Elsevier. doi: 10.1016/S1057-1922(06)12004-1
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Kiah Smith is:
- Not available for supervision
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Australian Civic Food Networks in Food Systems Governance: Experiences, Challenges, and Opportunities
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
Doctor Philosophy
Australian Civic Food Networks in Food Systems Governance: Experiences, Challenges, and Opportunities
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
Doctor Philosophy
COVID-19 impacts on alternative and local food systems: Unpacking the potential for sustainable food production and consumption
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Katherine Cullerton
-
Doctor Philosophy
Civil society participation and reflexive governance in Australia's food system
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
Doctor Philosophy
Digital and Agricultural Innovation, and Alternative Agriculture Practices in Australia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kristen Lyons
-
Doctor Philosophy
Women's Empowerment Through Contract Farming: Vegetable Seed Value Chains in Bangladesh
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Rajendra Adhikari
-
Doctor Philosophy
Digital and Agricultural Innovation, and Alternative Agriculture Practices in Australia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kristen Lyons
-
Doctor Philosophy
Women's Empowerment Through Contract Farming: Vegetable Seed Value Chains in Bangladesh
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Rajendra Adhikari
Completed supervision
-
2025
Doctor Philosophy
Australian Civic Food Networks in Food Systems Governance: Experiences, Challenges, and Opportunities
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
2025
Doctor Philosophy
Digital and Agricultural Innovation, and Alternative Agriculture Practices in Australia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kristen Lyons
-
2025
Doctor Philosophy
Women's Empowerment Through Contract Farming: Vegetable Seed Value Chains in Bangladesh
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Rajendra Adhikari
-
2024
Doctor Philosophy
Evaluating hydrogen attitudes and citizen transformation through deliberation
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Alastair Stark
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2020
Doctor Philosophy
Agri-food transformations in Northern Australia: The work of local actors in mediating financial investments
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
Media
Enquiries
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