scholarly journals Food insecurity, food deserts, reproduction and pregnancy: we should alert from now

Author(s):  
Gian Carlo Di Renzo ◽  
Valentina Tosto
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Joshua Sbicca

The formation of food-labor alliances in Los Angeles pushes food justice politics beyond a focus on food access, culturally appropriate food, and self-determination by strategically emphasizing economic inequalities and working conditions and engaging in confrontational politics. These alliances reveal that it is important to have highly visible labor campaigns, the integration of activists with direct knowledge or experience of food work and food insecurity into the food movement, and labor activists who will combat food deserts and therefore work alongside food justice activists through the lens of poverty. In short, it is essential to build a food movement that can fight to take care of the hands that grow, process, deliver, and sell the food meant to nourish the good food revolution.


Author(s):  
Pascale Joassart-Marcelli ◽  
Fernando J. Bosco

Food and taste have become symbols of neighborhood transformation and powerful tools of urban renewal. Building on Bourdieu’s notion of taste as social distinction, we argue that food distinguishes places, giving some neighborhoods character and value, while stigmatizing others as food deserts. Although new and reclaimed food spaces seem to transform gentrifying neighborhoods and attract newcomers, food insecurity remains a significant concern among long-term residents, who resent recent changes and feel displaced. This chapter relies on qualitative reviews of restaurants in two rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods of San Diego to show how tastes become ways for newcomers and long-term residents to relate to each other, reflecting broader socio-spatial processes associated with class, race, and ethnicity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy Wagner ◽  
Lucy Hinton ◽  
Cameron McCordic ◽  
Samuel Owuor ◽  
Guénola Capron ◽  
...  

Recent conceptualizations of ‘food deserts’ have expanded from a sole focus on access to supermarkets, to food retail outlets, to all household food sources. Each iteration of the urban food desert concept has associated this kind of food sourcing behavior to poverty, food insecurity, and dietary diversity characteristics. While the term continues to evolve, there has been little empirical evidence to test whether these assumed associations hold in cities of the Global South. This paper empirically tests the premises of three iterations of the urban food desert concept using household survey data collected in Nairobi, Kenya, and Mexico City, Mexico. While these associations are statistically significant and show the expected correlation direction between household food sourcing behavior and food security, the strength of these relationships tends to be weak. These findings indicate that the urban food desert concept developed in North American and UK cities may have limited relevance to measuring urban food insecurity in the Global South.


2005 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lois Wright Morton ◽  
Ella Annette Bitto ◽  
Mary Jane Oakland ◽  
Mary Sand

Diabetes Care ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (6) ◽  
pp. 1188-1195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth A. Berkowitz ◽  
Andrew J. Karter ◽  
Giselle Corbie-Smith ◽  
Hilary K. Seligman ◽  
Sarah A. Ackroyd ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Crush ◽  
Ndeyapo Nickanor ◽  
Lawrence Kazembe

Informal settlements in rapidly-growing African cities are urban and peri-urban spaces with high rates of formal unemployment, poverty, poor health outcomes, limited service provision, and chronic food insecurity. Traditional concepts of food deserts developed to describe North American and European cities do not accurately capture the realities of food inaccessibility in Africa’s urban informal food deserts. This paper focuses on a case study of informal settlements in the Namibian capital, Windhoek, to shed further light on the relationship between informality and food deserts in African cities. The data for the paper was collected in a 2016 survey and uses a sub-sample of households living in shack housing in three informal settlements in the city. Using various standard measures, the paper reveals that the informal settlements are spaces of extremely high food insecurity. They are not, however, food deprived. The proximity of supermarkets and open markets, and a vibrant informal food sector, all make food available. The problem is one of accessibility. Households are unable to access food in sufficient quantity, quality, variety, and with sufficient regularity.


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