In the final episode of Fields of Power, we step back from the land grabbing cases we've traced across Hungary and ask a deeper question: what does land have to do with democracy?
Episode 4: Land & Democracy
Péter and Ian begin on a small farm outside Budapest, where Katalin, an agroecological farmer, is experimenting with another way of living and growing food. Her garden is not just about vegetables, but about community, care, and reimagining what farming and life might look like beyond profit, fear, and extraction. From community-supported agriculture to seed saving and open gates, her story offers a glimpse of an alternative future rooted in local cooperation rather than control.
From there, a bigger picture emerges. Drawing together voices from across the series – Éva and Logan, organic farmers, Noémi the researcher – we explore how land grabbing, EU agricultural subsidies, and the concentration of land in the hands of politically connected elites undermine democratic life. Democracy, which is not just about elections or institutions, but about relationships: to land, to food, to one another, and to the possibility of living without fear.
This episode challenges the idea that Hungary is an exception. Instead, it asks what its story reveals about Europe as a whole and about the fragile ties between land, power, and democracy… everywhere.
This is not an ending wrapped in easy optimism. It is a call to pay attention, to question systems that concentrate power, and to recognise that the struggles over agriculture fields are also struggles over our collective future.