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Real Farming Trust
Remote working, with travel required to Edinburgh, Belfast, Brighton and London
Posted: 7 Jan 2026
Deadline: 3 Feb 2026
Compensation: £34,790 (pro rata at 0.7 FTE through Sept 2027, then at 0.6 FTE through Sept 2030)
Paid Part-time Fixed term / contract Remote working
Job description
Food Justice Communications Coordinator
Part-time (0.7 FTE, 7.5 hrs/day, 26.25 hrs/wk), remote, UK-based
Fixed-term contract at 0.7 FTE through September 2027, decreasing to 0.6 FTE thereafter until September 2030
Candidates must have the right to work in the UK.
Ideal start date: 1st April 2026
This role will require travel to Edinburgh, Belfast, Brighton and London, so there is a preference for candidates who live within travel distance of these locations.
About the Real Farming Trust
The Real Farming Trust (RFT) runs a number of programmes which bring people together to advocate for a fairer food and farming system based on agroecology. We are looking for a communications coordinator to work across two programmes, funded by the National Lottery Community Fund: Extended Table and Twinning (see descriptions below). The coordinator will work with the programme managers of each of these programmes, as well as each programme’s partners, to draw out and communicate the learning. A key part of the communications coordinator’s role is to support community members in both programmes to advocate for themselves and their needs. We are a small charity and value honesty, empathy, care and compassion in our interactions with each other in the organisation and with the partners we work with.
The two programmes that this role covers are:
Extended Table – (3 days per week to September 2030) Extended Table is a 5-year programme of work across the UK with four delivery partners. The Real Farming Trust’s role in the project is to evaluate the work, maximise impact from the evaluation, identify meaning and learning and to communicate this to cause wider change in food systems.
Extended Table is about bottom-up community development and self-advocacy. The communications coordinator will be serving the delivery partners to understand and draw out their messages and then amplify them.
The partners are the NOW group, Edinburgh Cyrenians, Organic Lea / Hornbeam cafe and Brighton and Hove Food Partnership. They work directly in communities of need, addressing social situations arising from learning disabilities, neurodiversity, homelessness, food poverty and marginalisation. They will offer food activities, such as community cafes, to bring people together and build community cohesion. This project is primarily about social inclusion and agency through food, not primarily about farming. It builds on a previous partnership project with the same partners called Ready Healthy Eat. There is more information about Extended Table here.
Twinning (0.5 days per week through September 2027) The aim of Twinning is to use food as a vehicle for fostering connection and understanding between urban and rural communities. The programme links four pairs of twins, each consisting of a community-run farm and an urban community organisation. The urban community organisations are a foodbank, two community organisations working with migrants and refugees and an organisation supporting people with learning difficulties.
RFT’s role is to: (1) support the twins and manage the administrative and financial tasks of the programme; and (2) to pull out learning to share across the twins and with other organisations and local and national policymakers working to promote understanding between communities that are geographically and culturally separated from each other. Additional information about the programme can be found here.
About the Role
The Real Farming Trust employs a manager for the Twinning Programme and a manager for Extended Table. The Food Justice Communications Coordinator will work closely with both of them and act as a link between the community delivery partners and the audiences we are seeking to engage. This includes all those who affect the delivery of community food provision - for example, policymakers and campaigners, public health, funders, community delivery organisations, mosques and churches, large operators in the sector (eg, Fareshare), health and disability groups. The communications coordinator will have the skills to reach a wide range of audiences, as well as identify new groups and organisations that are not currently engaged in this work.
There are two main areas of focus: To use the learning from the Programmes to effect wider change, beyond the project partners; and to enable marginalised participants and communities to speak out for themselves.
The communications work will drive systems change by amplifying the voices of community members and enabling them to advocate for their own needs. This will be supported by activities that focus on capacity building and skill sharing, including a variety of workshops on topics such as:
Working with the delivery partners to identify the stories community members want to tell and the messages that are coming out of the programme activities, the communications coordinator will further the reach of the project.
Activities will include:
One to one and small group time with marginalised participants to help them to articulate and then communicate their issues in ways that suit them. This includes adults with learning disabilities, migrants and asylum seekers, people with insecure housing, people living with addictions and older isolated people.
Drawing out learning from partners and creating accurate, effective, change-making, public-facing storytelling, such as:
Policy-influencing communications (ie, briefing papers, reports)
Videos capturing the breadth of the project
Developing training materials for accessible community- and peer-oriented webinars/workshops, such as:
Toolkits and how-tos
Support workshops and activities on advocacy/campaigning with local partners
Reporting on the project activities through RFT channels. including:
Blogs on the RFT websites (once every two months)
Monthly social media posts on RFT channels
The communications coordinator will work closely with the academic and external evaluators to identify significant data and communicate that to cause changes in practice. The communications coordinator will also enable interaction between different partners’ community members such as online discussions or activities including cook-alongs, grow-alongs, gaming etc. Through this approach, the communications work will help break down silos, build new networks of influence, improve practice and help community members find their voice so that their messages are widely heard.
Key responsibilities include:
You may also undertake other responsibilities in connection with the work of the Extended Table and Twinning programmes to support the successful delivery of the programmes, as agreed with RFT.
Essential Skills
Community:
Communications:
General:
Desirable Criteria
RFT does not have an office and all staff work remotely from home. The successful candidate must provide their own laptop and be a self-starter able to work alone with occasional remote supervision. This role will require travel to Edinburgh, Belfast, Brighton and London, so there is a preference for candidates who live within half a day's travel distance of these locations.
The benefits you will get:
Application information
Please email your CV and a covering letter (no more than 1-page) detailing evidence (eg, examples of experience, qualifications) that you meet the criteria listed and why you would like to join our team as a Word document to Brittany Oakes at brittany@realfarming.org by 12pm GMT (midday) on Thursday, 3rd February 2026. Please note that your application will be shared with an Extended Table partner, Brighton and Hove Food Partnership. Their privacy policy can be found here.
If you have questions about the role, please contact Jade Bashford at jade@realfarming.org (allowing several days’ notice for a reply).
What will happen after you have sent in your application
Equity and Anti-Oppression
We are committed to becoming a more inclusive workplace with a diverse staff body. We believe this is essential to our effectiveness as an organisation and our ability to fulfil our mission of “good food for everyone, forever”. We need to address both inequity and oppression within our work if we are to meet our aim. There will be tensions that this work creates and difficult questions that we need to address both internally and externally.
We know that people with certain backgrounds and characteristics are underrepresented in our team and in the alternative food and farming movement, and we want to address this. We are committed to working proactively to dismantle these systems of oppression and ensure equal opportunities for everyone, regardless of their background. We have started to do this work internally, but we know there is much more to do. Every member of RFT staff is involved and part of this work.
Equality and Diversity Monitoring Form
The Real Farming Trust is committed to promoting equality and diversity in line with the Equality Act 2010, providing an inclusive and co-operative environment in which all individuals feel respected. Filling in this equality and diversity monitoring form is voluntary. The information you provide will be kept confidential and will only be used for monitoring purposes. Please don’t enter any information that would identify you. This form is kept separately from your application and will not be seen by interviewers.
Please note that due to the volume of applications we usually receive, we regret that we are unable to offer feedback to individual applicants.
Thank you for your interest in the Real Farming Trust.
Extended Table and Twinning are generously funded by the National Lottery Community Fund.
Please mention Roots to Work when applying for these jobs
About Real Farming Trust
The Real Farming Trust connects and supports people who are transforming our food system. We provide spaces and develop networks for ideas, connections and partnerships to flourish, fund small-scale food and farming businesses, and advocate for a fairer food system based on agroecology.
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