Nourishing women: toward a feminist political ecology of community supported agriculture in the United States

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 307-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucy Jarosz
2020 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 101743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Buechler ◽  
Verónica Vázquez-García ◽  
Karina Guadalupe Martínez-Molina ◽  
Dulce María Sosa-Capistrán

2022 ◽  
pp. 251484862110698
Author(s):  
David C. Eisenhauer

Recent work in urban geography and political ecology has explored the roots of housing segregation in the United States within governmental polices and racial prejudice within the real estate sector. Additional research has demonstrated how coastal management practices has largely benefited wealthy, white communities. In this paper, I bring together insights from these two strands of research to demonstrate how both coastal management and governmental housing policies combined to shape racial inequalities within and around Asbury Park, New Jersey. By focusing on the period between 1945 and 1970, I show how local, state, and federal actors repeatedly prioritized improving and protecting the beachfront areas of the northern New Jersey shore while promising to eventually address the housing and economic needs of the predominately Black ‘West Side’ neighbourhood of Asbury Park. This paper demonstrates that not only did governmental spending on coastal management largely benefit white suburban homeowners but also came at the expense of promised spending within Black neighbourhoods. The case study has implications for other coastal regions in the United States in which housing segregation persists. As climate change and sea level rise unfold, the history of racial discrimination in coastal development raises important considerations for efforts to address emerging hazards and risks.


2005 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 995-1014 ◽  
Author(s):  
James McCarthy

This paper explores the remarkable congruence between the proliferation of community forestry initiatives in North America in recent years and the ascendance of particular forms of neoliberalism. In it I argue that, in the United States in particular, such initiatives are best understood as hybrids between ‘rollout’ neoliberalism and contemporaneous trends in the management of protected areas and state-owned forests. This interpretation contributes to recent arguments that the environment has been understudied as an arena through which neoliberalism has been actively constituted, rather than simply a passive recipient of ‘impacts’. Moreover, surprisingly little academic work has explored the imbrications of specific changes in environmental governance and evolving neoliberalism in the latter's ‘First World’ geographic hearths, such as the USA and the United Kingdom. In this paper I undertake such an investigation with respect to community forestry in the United States. The paper traces the major antecedents, introduction, and institutionalizations of community forestry in the United States, and shows how their conceptualizations and enactments of ‘community’ are structured by hegemonic neoliberal ideas, making community forestry in this context supplementary, rather than oppositional, to neoliberal restructurings. Exploration of the current Bush administration's enthusiastic adoption of central elements of community forestry bolsters this interpretation. Finally, the conclusion draws implications from this case for debates in political ecology.


Author(s):  
John M. Polimeni ◽  
Raluca Iorgulescu Polimeni ◽  
Richard L. Shirey ◽  
Christina L. Trees ◽  
W. Scott Trees

<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify; margin: 0in 0.6in 0pt 0.5in;"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;">Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) has undergone both a rapid increase in growth and interest over the last decade.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>As such, the amount of literature on the subject has also increased.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>However, there are few, if any, theoretical models of demand on CSA that have been developed from membership data. This paper uses both survey and anecdotal data of members of the Roxbury Biodynamic Farm, the second largest CSA in the United States, to present a theory of demand for CSA membership. Included in the discussion is consideration of the evidence that there is a direct relationship between production method and demand, usually a shibboleth in traditional economic analysis. Further exploration considers the possibility that over time participation influences the very nature of demand for CSA membership, and hypothesizes that this dynamic demand is a necessary but insufficient condition for the sustainability of CSA.</span></span></p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Shearer

Although much research on climate change has focused on its disproportionate effects on the Global South, communities—particularly indigenous populations—within "developed" nations in the Global North can also face significant effects and inadequate assistance. One example is the native village and city of Kivalina in northwest Alaska. Through a case study of Kivalina, this article explores the gaps in U.S. policy for relocating Alaska Natives due to the effects of climate change. There is currently no policy in place—within the United States or internationally—for the resettlement of communities displaced by climate change. And in the United States there is no lead agency in charge of relocating displaced communities, despite several U.S. government reports stating that at least four Alaska Native villages, including Kivalina, must be resettled due to warming Arctic temperatures and erosion. This leaves government agencies in charge of assisting villages like Kivalina, such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, who are responsible for helping ensure Kivalina's safety but are not empowered to innovate new procedures and holistically address what is an unprecedented problem: climate change. This has left Kivalina in what is termed here an administrative orbit, with residents made to work their way through a patchwork of various government programs and procedures that are time-consuming and often insufficient. In exploring these intra-national inequities, this article examines how a protocol specifically designed for those displaced by climate change, such as "climigration," could be merged with existing government efforts around emergency management to help prevent disasters before they occur, and to protect at-risk communities like Kivalina.Keywords: Disaster management; Alaska: environmentally induced migration; indigenous studies; resilience; displacement; relocation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 64-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hikaru Hanawa Peterson ◽  
Mykel R. Taylor ◽  
Quentin Baudouin

Author(s):  
Dan McKanan

Rudolf Steiner’s teaching on economics, along with his broader social theory of “threefolding,” inspired the emergence of green banking and community-supported agriculture in the 1970s and 1980s. Steiner taught that economics, politics, and culture represent three distinct social spheres, each with its own inner processes; he also taught that the economic sphere should be characterized by “fraternal” cooperation. This idea inspired a cluster of short-lived cooperative enterprises just after World War I and was revived with greater success beginning in the 1970s. Anthroposophical banks and social finance organizations include GLS Bank, Triodos Bank, and RSF Social Finance in the United States. The cooperative principles that govern the banks contributed to the evolution of social entrepreneurship and “B-corps” and inspired biodynamic farmers to create community-supported agriculture, in which a community of consumers shares the costs and risks of maintaining a farm.


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