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- Title
Working Toward a Just, Equitable, and Local Food System: The Social Impact of Community-Based Agriculture.
- Authors
Macias, Thomas
- Abstract
Objective. This article serves as a pilot study of three central aspects of sociological research concerning the impact of local agriculture on local communities: food equity, social integration, and natural human capital. Methods. Four CSA farmers, four partners in a direct-market organic farm, and four community garden site coordinators working in the Intervale, a local agriculture project in Burlington, Vermont, were interviewed in person for this research. Additionally, the author collected observational data in the Intervale, at two local farmers' markets, and as a member of a local community garden. Result. Different modes of local agricultural production have distinctive effects on the local population with regard to equitable access to healthy food, social inclusion, and experiential knowledge of the natural world. Conclusions. Given class-based disparities in local agricultural participation, local food projects should consider promoting programs designed for broader social inclusion, including subsidized farmer-to-family coupons.
- Subjects
BURLINGTON (Vt.); VERMONT; LOCAL foods; COMMUNITY organization; COMMUNITY-supported agriculture; LOCAL government &; environmental policy; GOVERNMENT policy; ECOLOGY
- Publication
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell), 2008, Vol 89, Issue 5, p1086
- ISSN
0038-4941
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-6237.2008.00566.x