Urban Agriculture in the Food-Disabling City: (Re)defining Urban Food Justice, Reimagining a Politics of Empowerment
Corresponding Author
Chiara Tornaghi
Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience (CAWR), Coventry University, Coventry, UK
Search for more papers by this authorCorresponding Author
Chiara Tornaghi
Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience (CAWR), Coventry University, Coventry, UK
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
Recent literature has pointed to the role of urban agriculture in self-empowerment and learning, and in constituting ways to achieve food justice. Building on this work the paper looks at the potential and constraints for overcoming the residual and contingent status of urban agriculture. The first part of the paper aims to expand traditional class/race/ethnicity discussions and to reflect on global, cultural, procedural, capability, distributional and socio-environmental forms of injustice that unfold in the different stages of urban food production. The second part reflects on how to bring forward food justice and build a politics of engagement, capability and empowerment. Three interlinked strategies for action are presented: (1) enhancing the reflexivity and cohesion of the urban food movement by articulating a challenge to neoliberal urbanism; (2) converging urban and agrarian food justice struggles by shaping urban agroecology; and (3) regaining control over social reproduction by engaging with food commoning.
References
- Agyeman J and McEntee J (2014) Moving the field of food justice forward through the lens of urban political ecology. Geography Compass 8(3): 211–220
10.1111/gec3.12122 Google Scholar
- A H Alkon and J Agyeman (eds) (2011) Cultivating Food Justice: Race, Class, and Sustainability. Cambridge: MIT Press
10.7551/mitpress/8922.001.0001 Google Scholar
- Allen P (2010) Realizing justice in local food systems. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3(2): 295–308
- Altieri M A and Toledo V M (2011) The agroecological revolution in Latin America: Rescuing nature, ensuring food sovereignty, and empowering peasants. Journal of Peasant Studies 38(3): 587–612
- Anderson C, Pimbert M and Kiss C (2015) “Building, Defending, and Strengthening Agroecology: A Global Struggle For Food Sovereignty.” ILEIA—Centre for Learning on Sustainable Agriculture and Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience. http://www.agriculturesnetwork.org/resources/pubs/building-defending-and-strengthening-agroecology/buildingdefendingstrengtheningagroecology20151.pdf/at_download/file (last accessed 8 August 2016)
- Block J P, Scribner R A and DeSalvo K B (2004) Fast food, race/ethnicity, and income: A geographic analysis. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 27(3): 211–217
- Bradley K and Galt R E (2014) Practicing food justice at Dig Deep Farms & Produce, East Bay Area, California: Self-determination as a guiding value and intersections with foodie logics. Local Environment 19(2):172–186
10.1080/13549839.2013.790350 Google Scholar
- Brenner N and Theodore N (2002) Cities and the geographies of “actually existing neoliberalism”. Antipode 34(3): 349–379
- Bresnihan P and Byrne M (2015) Escape into the city: Everyday practices of commoning and the production of urban space in Dublin. Antipode 47(1): 36–54
- Caffentzis G (2010) The future of “the commons”: Neoliberalism's “Plan B” or the original disaccumulation of capital? New Formations 69(1): 23–41
10.3898/NEWF.69.01.2010 Google Scholar
- Dehaene M, Tornaghi C and Sage C (2016) Mending the metabolic rift: Placing the “urban” in urban agriculture. In F Lohrberg, L Scazzosi, L Lička and A Timpe (eds) Urban Agriculture Europe (pp 174–177). Berlin: Jovis
- De Schutter O (2011) How not to think of land-grabbing: three critiques of large-scale investments in farmland. Journal of Peasant Studies 38(2): 249–279
- Dixon B A (2014) Learning to see food justice. Agriculture and Human Values 31(2): 175–184
- Dowler E (2008) Food and health inequalities: The challenge for sustaining just consumption. Local Environment 13(8): 759–772
10.1080/13549830802478736 Google Scholar
- Dupuis E M and Goodman D (2005) Should we go “home” to eat? Towards a reflexive politics of localism. Journal of Rural Studies 21(3): 359–371
- Edelman M, Weis T, Baviskar A, Borras S M, Holt-Giménez E, Kandiyoti D and Wolford W (2014) Introduction: Critical perspectives on food sovereignty. Journal of Peasant Studies 41(6): 911–931
- Eizenberg E (2012) Actually existing commons: Three moments of space of community gardens in New York City. Antipode 44(3): 764–782
- Fairbairn M (2012) Framing transformation: The counter-hegemonic potential of food sovereignty in the US context. Agriculture and Human Values 29(2): 217–230
- Fairbairn M, Fox J, Isakson S R, Levien M, Peluso N, Razavi S, Scoones I and Sivaramakrishnan K (2014) Introduction: New directions in agrarian political economy. Journal of Peasant Studies 41(5): 653–666
- Fernandez M, Goodall K, Olson M and Méndez V E (2013) Agroecology and alternative agri-food movements in the United States: Towards a sustainable agri-food system. Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 37(1): 115–126
- Follmann A and Viehoff V (2015) A green garden on red clay: Creating a new urban common as a form of political gardening in Cologne, Germany. Local Environment 20(10): 1148–1174
- Food Ethics Council (2010) Food Justice: The Report of the Food and Fairness Inquiry. Brighton: Food Ethics Council. http://www.foodethicscouncil.org/uploads/publications/2010%20FoodJustice.pdf (last accessed 8 August 2016)
- Friedmann M (1987) International regimes of food and agriculture since 1870. In T Shanin (ed) Peasants and Peasant Societies (pp 258–276). Oxford: Basil Blackwell
- Galt R E, Gray L C and Hurley P (2014) Subversive and interstitial food spaces: Transforming selves, societies, and society–environment relations through urban agriculture and foraging. Local Environment 19(2): 133–146
10.1080/13549839.2013.832554 Google Scholar
- Gliessman S (2012) Agroecology: Growing the roots of resistance. Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 37(1): 19–31
- Gottlieb R and Fisher A (1996) “First feed the face”: Environmental justice and community food security. Antipode 28(2): 193–203
- Gottlieb R and Joshi A (2010) Food Justice. Cambridge: MIT Press
10.7551/mitpress/7826.001.0001 Google Scholar
- Gould C (1996) Diversity and democracy: Representing differences. In S Benhabib (ed) Democracy and Difference (pp 171–186). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press
- Guthman J (2012) Doing justice to bodies? Reflections on food justice, race, and biology. Antipode 46(5): 1153–1171
- Harvey D (2012) Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the Urban Revolution. New York: Verso
- Heynen N (2006) Justice of eating in the city: The political ecology of hunger. In N Heynen, M Kaika and E Swyngedouw (eds) In the Nature of Cities: Urban Political Ecology and the Politics of Urban Metabolism (pp 129–142). New York: Routledge
- N Heynen, M Kaika and E Swyngedouw (eds) (2006) In the Nature of Cities: Urban Political Ecology and the Politics of Urban Metabolism. New York: Routledge
10.4324/9780203027523 Google Scholar
- Heynen N, Kurtz H E and Trauger A (2012) Food justice, hunger, and the city. Geography Compass 6(5): 304–311
10.1111/j.1749-8198.2012.00486.x Google Scholar
- Holloway J (2010) Crack Capitalism. London: Pluto
- Holt-Gimenez E and Patel R (2009) Food Rebellions! Crisis and the Hunger for Justice. Oxford: Pambazuka
- Huron A (2015) Working with strangers in saturated space: Reclaiming and maintaining the urban commons. Antipode 47(4): 963–979
- Just Food (2016) Just Food empowers and supports community leaders to advocate for and increase access to healthy, locally-grown food, especially in underserved NYC neighborhoods. http://www.justfood.org (last accessed 9 August 2016)
- MacKinnon D and Derickson K (2013) From resilience to resourcefulness: A critique of resilience policy and activism. Progress in Human Geography 37(2): 253–270
- McClintock N (2010) Why farm the city? Theorizing urban agriculture through a lens of metabolic rift. Cambridge Journal of Regions Economy and Society 3(2): 191–207
- McClintock N (2014) Radical, reformist, and garden-variety neo-liberal: Coming to terms with urban agriculture's contradictions. Local Environment 19(2): 147–171
- McMichael P (2013) Food Regimes and Agrarian Questions. Black Point: Fernwood
10.3362/9781780448794 Google Scholar
- Merrifield A (2014) The New Urban Question. London: Pluto
- Modern Farmer (2013) Dear Modern Farmer: Can I legally grow food in my front yard? 11 June. http://modernfarmer.com/2013/06/dear-modern-farmer-can-i-legally-grow-food-in-my-front-yard/ (last accessed 9 August 2016)
- Mother Earth News (2012) Fight for the right to grow food: Orlando man cited for illegal gardening. 12 November. http://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/right-to-grow-food-zb01211zrob.aspx#axzz39RArhvxr (last accessed 9 August 2016)
- Munoz-Plaza C E, Filomena S and Morland K (2008) Disparities in food access: Inner-city residents describe their local food environment. Journal of Hunger and Environmental Nutrition 2(2/3): 51–64
10.1080/19320240801891453 Google Scholar
- Nelson N M and Woods C B (2009) Obesogenic environments: Are neighbourhood environments that limit physical activity obesogenic? Health and Place 15(4): 917–924
- Nussbaum M (2006) Frontiers of Justice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press
- Passidomo C (2014) Whose right to (farm) the city? Race and food justice activism in post-Katrina New Orleans. Agriculture and Human Values 31(3): 385–396
- Patriot Gardens (2013) Our right to grow our own food. http://patriotgardens.blogspot.co.uk (last accessed 9 August 2016)
- Procter K L, Clarke G P, Ransley J K and Cade J (2008) Micro-level analysis of childhood obesity, diet, physical activity, residential socioeconomic and social capital variables: Where are the obesogenic environments in Leeds? Area 40(3): 323–340
- Purcell M and Brown J (2005) Against the local trap: Scale and the study of environment and development. Progress in Development Studies 5(4): 279–297
10.1191/1464993405ps122oa Google Scholar
- Purcell M and Tyman S K (2015) Cultivating food as a right to the city. Local Environment 20(10): 1132–1147
- Raco M (2015) The post-politics of sustainability planning: Privatization and the demise of democratic government. In J Wilson and E Swyngedouw (eds) The Post Political and Its Discontents: Spaces of Depoliticisation, Spectres of Radical Politics (pp 25–47). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
- Rosol M (2012) Community volunteering as neoliberal strategy? Green space production in Berlin. Antipode 44(1): 239–257
- Rosol M and Schweizer P (2012) ortoloco Zurich: Urban agriculture as an economy of solidarity. City 16(6): 713–724
10.1080/13604813.2012.709370 Google Scholar
-
Saed (2012) Urban farming: The right to what sort of city? Capitalism, Nature, Socialism 23(4): 1–9
10.1080/10455752.2012.724776 Google Scholar
- Sbicca J (2012) Growing food justice by planting an anti-oppression foundation: Opportunities and obstacles for a budding social movement. Agriculture and Human Values 29(4): 455–466
- Schanbacher W D (2010) The Politics of Food: The Global Conflict Between Food Security and Food Sovereignty. Oxford: Praeger
10.5040/9798400698576 Google Scholar
- Schmelzkopf K (2002) Incommensurability, land use, and the right to space: Community gardens in New York City. Urban Geography 23(4): 323–343
- Sen A (2005) Human rights and capabilities. Journal of Human Development 6(2): 151–166
10.1080/14649880500120491 Google Scholar
- Seyfang G and Longhurst N (2013) Growing green money? Mapping grassroots currencies for sustainable development. Ecological Economics 86: 65–77
- Shillington L J (2013) Right to food, right to the city: Household urban agriculture and socionatural metabolism in Managua, Nicaragua. Geoforum 44(1): 103–111
- Shrader-Frechette K (1984) Agriculture, property, and procedural justice. Agriculture and Human Values 1(3): 15–28
10.1007/BF01530709 Google Scholar
- Tornaghi C (2014) Critical geography of urban agriculture. Progress in Human Geography 38(4): 551–567
- Townshend T and Lake A (2009) Obesogenic urban form: Theory, policy, and practice. Health and Place 15(4): 909–916
- Van Dyck B, Tornaghi C, Halder S, Van Der Haide, E and Saunders E (forthcoming) The making of a strategizing platform: From politicising the food movement in urban contexts to political urban agroecology. In A Exner, S Kumnig and M Rosol (eds) Green Urban Activities Between Neoliberal Urban Development and Reclaiming the City From Below. Berlin (transcript in German)
- WCVB (2012) Newton: Hanging tomato garden must go. 1 June. http://www.wcvb.com/news/local/metro-west/Newton-hanging-tomato-garden-must-go/14421586#!bvpGKS (last accessed 9 August 2016)
- Weissman E (2014) Brooklyn's agrarian questions. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems 30(1): 92–102
- J Wilson and E Swyngedouw (eds) (2015) The Post Political and its Discontents: Spaces of Depoliticisation, Spectres of Radical Politics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
- H Wittman, A A Desmarais and N Wiebe (eds) (2011) Food Sovereignty: Reconnecting Food, Nature, and Community. Oxford: Pambazuka
- Young I (1990) Justice and the Politics of Difference. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press




