##PREHEADER##

JAFSCD logo

August 22, 2023

from the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development

 

JAFSCD is the world’s only community-supported journal. JAFSCD content is open access (free) thanks to the generous support of our shareholders: the JAFSCD Shareholder Consortium, Library Shareholders, a growing number of Individual Shareholders, and our seven JAFSCD Partners:

 

Does more urban ag land = more food justice? 

Tomatoes in the community garden in Loring Park in Minneapolis, Minn.; photo provided.

JAFSCD peer-reviewed research article by Hannah Ramer and Kristen C. Nelson (both at the U of Minnesota)

In response to surging interest in urban agriculture, many cities across the country have developed policies that provide access to publicly owned land. These policies are often touted as a way to address environmental and food injustice and racial equity. However, if not carefully crafted, land access policies have the potential to exacerbate existing inequalities.

 

In a new JAFSCD article, “Digging in: Toward a more just urban garden land policy,” Hannah Ramer (corresponding author) and Kristen C. Nelson share findings from a comparative case study of urban garden polices adopted by the City of Minneapolis and the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (a semi-independent institution). With a vibrant and diverse urban agriculture movement, a reputation as a progressive bastion, and some of the most egregious racial inequalities in the country, Minneapolis is a particularly fitting place to dig into the messy details and muddy debates over justice in garden land policy. Beyond the particularities of urban agriculture and Minneapolis, the study offers concrete insights for scholars and practitioners working to develop more just policies and urban futures.

 

KEY FINDINGS

  • Seemingly minor policy details systematically shaped who was able to benefit from garden land policies.
  • Public participation, especially in the stage where the details were determined, played a key role in reducing barriers to racial equity.

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR POLICY, PRACTICE, AND RESEARCH

To pursue more just urban agriculture land access policies, practitioners should pay careful attention to:

  • Equity: Amount and geographical distribution of available land; complexity of the application process; fees and indirect costs; distribution of soil and air pollution; and the availability of other resources such as water, compost, soil testing, and raised beds.
  • Participation: Multiple ways for gardeners to meaningfully shape policies (from goal setting through policy evaluation) and garden sites (from design through day-to-day maintenance).
  • Recognition: A wide range of gardening practices, aesthetics, cultural meanings, and ways of relating to other-than-human species; avenues for redress and repair of historical and ongoing traumas including land dispossession, enslavement, forced migration, and labor exploitation.

Image above: Tomatoes in the community garden in Loring Park in Minneapolis, Minn.; photo provided.

 
FacebookLinkedIn

This email is sent to you as a notification of the newest JAFSCD articles and other occasional JAFSCD news.

Were you forwarded this JAFSCD News Flash and you'd like to join the mailing list? Sign up here!

JAFSCD is an open access, community-supported journal! Your library, program, or organization can become a shareholder to help keep JAFSCD's content available to all, regardless of their resources. We welcome anyone to become an individual shareholder; donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.

Center for Transformative Action

JAFSCD is published by the Thomas A. Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems, a project of the Center for Transformative Action (an affiliate of Cornell University). CTA is a 501(c)(3) organization that accepts donations on our behalf.

 


Click here to unsubscribe. | Click here to forward
View this email as a web page
Message sent by JAFSCD, info@jafscdcommunity.org
JAFSCD Community | Center for Transformative Action | P.O. Box 760 | Ithaca, NY 14851