Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 61
Filter
1.
PLoS One ; 15(4): e0230232, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32287267

ABSTRACT

As the dominant form of urban agriculture (UA) in Australia, existing home food gardens potentially represent a significant resource in the context of future urban food security and sustainability. However, a severe lack of in-field data has hindered our understanding of the form and function of home food gardens which in turn may hinder innovation and improvement. We investigated the productivity, resource efficiency and potential financial savings of home food gardens in South Australia. A group of 34 citizen science participants measured and recorded inputs and outputs from their gardens. Inputs included time spent on various gardening activities, financial costs, and water use. Outputs included crop yields, from which retail value and nutritional content were then derived. The paper outlines a field-demonstrated, comprehensive methodology for continued and consistent data collection for all forms of UA. We found smaller gardens to be more intensive than larger gardens, requiring higher inputs, but also returning higher outputs per unit area. Both productivity and resource efficiency varied among the gardens, and labour requirements were significantly lower than previously estimated. Water use efficiency of the gardens were calculated and found to have comparable water use efficiency to commercial horticulture. Of the gardens involved, we calculated that 65% should break even in five or less years and save money. After applying a minimum wage almost one in five gardens were financially viable. The results represent the most comprehensive measurements on home food gardens to date, and allow practical, evidence-based recommendations for diversification, time saving and smart irrigation practices to improve garden productivity and enhance the viability of UA.


Subject(s)
Food Supply/economics , Gardening/economics , Gardens/economics , Income , Humans , South Australia
2.
Ecol Food Nutr ; 57(4): 282-300, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29944014

ABSTRACT

Production for self-consumption can meet the principles of food safety such as respect for food habits and diversity. The participation of production for self-consumption in food availability was compared to the purchase of food for 30 days in 79 households (272 inhabitants) of the rural area of a Brazilian city in 2012. The food security was evaluated by the method "Food energy deficiency in the domicile" that classified 12.7% of the households as insecure. In all households, staple foods (rice, pasta, corn, beans, milk, eggs, meats) were available and more than 60% had processed foods (cookies, soft drinks). Only 22.7% of the calories came from production for own consumption and the biggest expense was the purchase of carbohydrates (91.1%), mainly sugar (12.2%). Evaluating only the energy availability of food is not sufficient since the quality and origin of food is of great relevance in the food security condition.


Subject(s)
Diet, Healthy , Family Characteristics , Food Supply , Gardening , Rural Health , Adult , Agriculture/economics , Brazil , Cross-Sectional Studies , Developing Countries , Diet, Healthy/economics , Diet, Healthy/ethnology , Diet, Healthy/psychology , Dietary Sugars/economics , Energy Intake/ethnology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Fast Foods , Female , Food Preferences/ethnology , Food Preferences/psychology , Food Quality , Food Supply/economics , Gardening/economics , Humans , Male , Nutrition Surveys , Nutritive Value , Rural Health/ethnology , Self Efficacy , Socioeconomic Factors
3.
PLoS One ; 12(7): e0181621, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28727757

ABSTRACT

Currently, the management of urban waste streams in developing countries is not optimized yet, and in many cases these wastes are disposed untreated in open dumps. This fact causes serious environmental and health problems due to the presence of contaminants and pathogens. Frequently, the use of specific low-cost strategies reduces the total amount of wastes. These strategies are mainly associated to the identification, separate collection and composting of specific organic waste streams, such as vegetable and fruit refuses from food markets and urban gardening activities. Concretely, in the Chimborazo Region (Ecuador), more than 80% of municipal solid waste is dumped into environment due to the lack of an efficient waste management strategy. Therefore, the aim of this study was to develop a demonstration project at field scale in this region to evaluate the feasibility of implanting the composting technology not only for the management of the organic waste fluxes from food market and gardening activities to be scaled-up in other developing regions, but also to obtain an end-product with a commercial value as organic fertilizer. Three co-composting mixtures were prepared using market wastes mixed with pruning of trees and ornamental palms as bulking agents. Two piles were created using different proportions of market waste and prunings of trees and ornamental palms: pile 1 (50:33:17) with a C/N ratio 25; pile 2: (60:30:10) with C/N ratio 24 and pile 3 (75:0:25) with C/N ratio 33), prepared with market waste and prunings of ornamental palm. Throughout the process, the temperature of the mixtures was monitored and organic matter evolution was determined using thermogravimetric and chemical techniques. Additionally, physico-chemical, chemical and agronomic parameters were determined to evaluate compost quality. The results obtained indicated that all the piles showed a suitable development of the composting process, with a significant organic matter decomposition, reached in a shorter period of time in pile 3. At the end of the process, all the composts showed absence of phytotoxicity and suitable agronomic properties for their use as organic fertilizers. This reflects the viability of the proposed alternative to be scaled-up in developing areas, not only to manage and recycle urban waste fluxes, but also to obtain organic fertilizers, including added value in economic terms related to nutrient contents.


Subject(s)
Cities , Fertilizers , Food , Gardening , Soil , Waste Management/methods , Analysis of Variance , Carbon/analysis , Ecuador , Feasibility Studies , Fertilizers/analysis , Fertilizers/economics , Gardening/economics , Gardening/methods , Nitrogen/analysis , Plants , Recycling/economics , Recycling/methods , Soil/chemistry , Temperature , Waste Management/economics
4.
Appetite ; 116: 589-598, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28527952

ABSTRACT

Social inequalities in diet are attributed to sociocultural determinants, economic constraints, and unequal access to healthy food. Fruits and vegetables are lacking in the diets of disadvantaged populations. The objective was to test the hypothesis that, in poor neighborhoods, community gardeners will have larger supply of healthy food, especially fruit and vegetables, than non-gardeners. We examined community gardens from the perspective of production, economics and nutrition, and social and symbolic dimensions, through multidisciplinary investigations involving women with access to a community garden plot in a poor neighborhood of Marseille, France. Gardeners' monthly household food supplies (purchases and garden production) were analyzed and compared with those of women with a similar socio-economic profile living in the same neighborhoods, without access to a garden. Twenty-one gardeners participated. Only eleven of them harvested during the month of the study, and the amount they collected averaged 53 g of produce per household member per day. Whether they harvested or not, most gardeners gave preference to diversity, taste and healthiness of produce over quantity produced. Interviews revealed a value assigned to social, cultural and symbolic dimensions: pride in producing and cooking their own produce, related self-esteem, and sharing their produce at the meal table. The only significant difference between the food supplies of gardener and non-gardener households was seen for fruit and vegetables (369 vs. 211 g/d per person). This difference was due to larger purchases of fruit and vegetables, and not to higher quantities produced. In spite of the cross-sectional nature of our study and the small quantities harvested, our results suggest that having access to a community garden could encourage socio-economically disadvantaged women to adopt dietary practices that more closely meet dietary recommendations.


Subject(s)
Gardening/economics , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diet/economics , Family Characteristics , Female , Food Supply/economics , France , Fruit/economics , Humans , Middle Aged , Nutrition Surveys , Social Behavior , Surveys and Questionnaires , Vegetables/economics
5.
Nutrition ; 33: 163-168, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27499206

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the level and predictors of dietary diversity (DD) in predominantly food-insecure area of South Wollo, Ethiopia among children ages 6 to 23 mo. METHODS: The study was conducted in October 2014. We selected 2080 children using a multistage sampling technique. DD in the preceding day of the survey was assessed with the standard seven-food group score. Predictors of DD were identified via Poisson regression model and the outputs are presented using adjusted incidence rate ratio (IRR) with 95% confidence interval (CI). RESULTS: Only 7% (95% CI, 5.9%-8.1%) of the children met the recommended minimum DD. Child age and maternal knowledge of infant and young child feeding (IYCF) were significant predictors of DD with IRR of 1.027 (95% CI, 1.022-1.032) and 1.026 (95% CI, 1.010-1.043). Households with moderate and severe food insecurity had 9% (95% CI, 3.8-13.9%) and 24.9% (95% CI, 14.6-44%) reduced chance of providing diversified food. Husbands' direct involvement in IYCF increased DD by 13.7% (95% CI, 7.4-20.4). Caregivers who discussed IYCF with health extension workers, participated in cooking demonstrations, and heard radio spots about IYCF in the preceding 3 mo had 11.7% (95% CI, 3.4-20.7%), 18.9% (95% CI, 0.3-40.9%), and 11.4% (95% CI, 4.8-18.4) higher chance of providing diversified food, respectively. Backyard gardening (IRR, 1.088; 95% CI, 1.031-1.148) and number of chickens owned (IRR, 1.011; 95% CI, 1.001-1.021) also were significant predictors. CONCLUSIONS: In predominately food-insecure areas, nutrition education, implementation of nutrition-sensitive agriculture, and husband involvement in IYCF can improve children's DD.


Subject(s)
Diet, Healthy , Feeding Methods , Food Supply , Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Patient Compliance , Urban Health , Animal Husbandry/economics , Animals , Chickens/growth & development , Child Development , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diet, Healthy/economics , Diet, Healthy/ethnology , Diet, Healthy/psychology , Ethiopia , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Fathers/education , Feeding Methods/economics , Female , Food Supply/economics , Gardening/economics , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Humans , Infant , Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena/ethnology , Male , Mothers/education , Nutrition Surveys , Patient Compliance/ethnology , Poverty Areas , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Health/economics , Urban Health/ethnology
6.
Appetite ; 105: 218-31, 2016 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27181200

ABSTRACT

Although the globalised food system delivers unparalleled food variety and quantity to most in the developed world it also disconnects consumers from where, how and by whom food is grown. This change in the food system has resulted in an acceptance of an anonymous and homogeneous food supply, which has contributed to over-consumption and the rise in diet-related diseases. 'Nutritionism' responds to this issue by maintaining that a 'healthy diet' can be achieved by consuming the correct balance of energy and nutrients, but with limited success. Yet, some food cultures can moderate the effects of the environmental drivers of increasing global obesity rates. This paper draws on this premise and presents an alternative eco-dietetic response, exploring people's meaning-making of food and food culture through local food networks. This research used narrative inquiry methodology and purposive sampling to gather stories through focus group conversations. Twenty people attended focus groups comprised of food procurers from one of three local food networks in the Canberra region: community gardens, a modified Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and farmers' markets. The findings showed that those using local food networks enjoyed a 'contemporary relational food culture' that highlighted the importance of people, place and time, in their visceral experiences of food. The community gardeners made meaning of food through their connections to the earth and to others. The farmers' market and CSA food procurers valued the seasonal, local and ethical food produced by their beloved farmer(s). This paper provides qualitative evidence that local food networks enable people to enjoy multi-dimensional relationships to food. Further research is required to examine whether experiencing a contemporary relational food culture can lead to improved health outcomes for people and the planet.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior , Diet, Healthy , Food Preferences , Food Supply , Food, Organic , Models, Psychological , Patient Compliance , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/ethics , Australian Capital Territory , Consumer Behavior/economics , Diet, Healthy/economics , Diet, Healthy/ethics , Diet, Healthy/ethnology , Diet, Healthy/psychology , Farmers , Female , Focus Groups , Food Preferences/ethics , Food Preferences/ethnology , Food Preferences/psychology , Food Supply/economics , Food Supply/ethics , Food, Organic/economics , Gardening/economics , Gardening/ethics , Humans , Internationality , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Organic Agriculture/economics , Organic Agriculture/ethics , Patient Compliance/ethnology , Patient Compliance/psychology , Pleasure , Qualitative Research , Seasons , Workforce
7.
HERD ; 10(1): 144-54, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27053578

ABSTRACT

AIM: This article outlines preliminary findings of a 3-year project that explored on-site food production on institutional properties, primarily healthcare facilities. BACKGROUND: There are growing pressures on healthcare facilities to improve their food offerings and incorporate food gardens into their health programs. While several healthcare facilities produce food on-site, there are few studies that explore opportunities, capacities, and institutional barriers related to on-site food production. METHODS: The study employed mixed methods including historical review, case studies, surveys, interviews, pilot garden projects, and Geographic Information System mapping. The number of participating institutions varied by method. RESULTS: Benefits associated with on-site food production can be health, economic, environmental, and social. There are also institutional barriers including administrative roadblocks, perceived obstacles, and the difficulty in quantitatively, measuring the qualitatively documented benefits. CONCLUSIONS: The benefits of food gardens far outweigh the challenges. On-site food production has tremendous potential to improve nutrition for staff and patients, offer healing spaces, better connect institutions with the communities in which they are located, and provide the long-professed benefits of gardening for all involved-from therapeutic benefits and outdoor physical activities to developing skills and social relationships in ways that few other activities do.


Subject(s)
Food Supply/methods , Gardening/organization & administration , Health Facilities , Schools , Community Participation , Gardening/economics , Gardening/statistics & numerical data , Geographic Information Systems , Humans , Ontario , Pilot Projects , Surveys and Questionnaires
8.
Am J Public Health ; 106(5): 854-6, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26985621

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We quantified the productivity of food gardens in Laramie, Wyoming, over 3 growing seasons. METHODS: From 2012 to 2014, 33 participating gardening households weighed and recorded each harvest. Academic partners measured plot sizes and converted reported harvest weights to volume in cups. RESULTS: The yield of the average 253-square-foot plot was enough to supply an adult with the daily US Department of Agriculture-recommended amount of vegetables for 9 months. CONCLUSIONS: Gardeners produced nutritionally meaningful quantities of food; thus, food gardening offers promise as an effective public health intervention for improving food security and nutritional health.


Subject(s)
Food Supply/statistics & numerical data , Gardening/statistics & numerical data , Food Supply/economics , Gardening/economics , Humans , Seasons , Wyoming
9.
J Public Health Manag Pract ; 22(4): 379-86, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26618848

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of minigrants on home food gardening and review 28 health-related minigrant programs reported in the literature for lessons relevant for using minigrant programs to promote community health. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial of the impact of minigrants on square footage of food garden area and on garden initiation in 2010 versus 2011. Interviews with participants were also conducted and coded and the literature was reviewed for findings from other community health minigrant programs. SETTING: Laramie, Wyoming. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty adults living in 53 households who attended a gardening training workshop in April 2011. INTERVENTION: A $40 minigrant in the form of a voucher, valid at a local gardening store. RESULTS: Minigrant recipients were more likely to increase their gardening space than the control group. The average increase for the intervention group was 39.2 ft (3.62 m) while the control group average garden plot size decreased slightly, on average, by 1.4 ft (-0.13 m). However, the data were not normally distributed and, therefore, nonparametric statistical tests were used. For the subset of 20 households that did not garden at all in 2010, minigrants also provided motivation to start gardening (8 of 10 minigrant households started a garden vs 2 of 10 control households). Results reported from other health minigrant programs are also positive, though few had quantitative outcomes or control groups for comparison. CONCLUSIONS: Even with very small amounts of money, minigrants show promise as an ethical, inexpensive, empowering, and effective health promotion strategy to enable families and communities to improve their health.


Subject(s)
Family Health/standards , Gardening/economics , Public Health/economics , Adult , Family Health/economics , Female , Food Assistance , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Male , Wyoming
10.
J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ; 11: 56, 2015 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26155835

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Home gardens (HGs) provide perspectives for conservation of plant genetic resources while contributing to improving livelihoods. However, knowledge of local factors shaping their ownership, plant diversity (PD) and structure is still limited especially in West-Africa, where food insecurity is acute. This is critical to ensure effective mainstreaming of HGs into future biodiversity conservation and food production policies. METHODS: Socio-economic and PD data were obtained from individual interviews (n = 470) and gardens inventories (n = 235) spanning humid, sub-humid and semi-arid zones of Benin. Generalised Linear Models, Hierarchical Cluster Analysis, Principal Component Analysis and Simple Correspondence Analysis were performed to examine socio-economic characteristics (age, gender, education level and main economic activity) affecting HGs ownership, and their effect coupled with intrinsic HGs characteristics (size, age) on PD and structure within HGs, across contrasting bio-geographical regions. RESULTS: HG ownership was significantly dependent upon a complex relationship between age, gender and education level of the farmers. The probability to own HG increased with age with an early involvement in home gardening for women. Similarly, with increasing age, it was more likely to find a male owner than a female owner among the uneducated informants and those of primary school. Inversely, it was more likely to find female owner than a male owner among secondary school level or more. PD increased with increasing owner age and size of the HG. Larger and more diversified HGs were found in sub-humid and semi-arid zones while smaller and less diversified HGs were encountered in the humid zone. HGs were multi-layered. Based on the prevailing plant groups, three categories of HG were distinguished: Herb based gardens, Herb and Shrub/Trees based gardens, and Palm and Liana based gardens. Their prevalence was dependent upon bio-geographical zones and HG owner socio-economic characteristics, with herbs based HGs being mainly associated to women. CONCLUSION: Results suggest effects of complex interactions between socio-economic factors on HG ownership, and influence of these effects combined with intrinsic characteristics of HGs on PD. The early involvement of women in home gardening and their particular interest in herbs and shrubs are important assets for future conservation strategies based on HG and food production. Interventions are required to interfere with declining PD in HG across generations to accommodate multiple ecosystem service benefits.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Food Supply/economics , Gardening/methods , Ownership/economics , Adult , Benin , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Ethnobotany/methods , Female , Gardening/economics , Humans , Male , Population Groups , Socioeconomic Factors
11.
Science ; 347(6225): 936, 2015 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25722390
12.
J Health Popul Nutr ; 33: 2, 2015 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26825273

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There has been limited decline in undernutrition rates in South Asia compared with the rest of Asia and one reason for this may be low levels of household food security. However, the evidence base on the determinants of household food security is limited. To develop policies intended to improve household food security, improved knowledge of the determinants of household food security is required. METHODS: Household data were collected in 2011 from a randomly selected sample of 2,809 women of reproductive age. The sample was drawn from nine unions in three districts of rural Bangladesh. Multinomial logistic regression was conducted to measure the relationship between selected determinants of household food security and months of adequate household food provisioning, and a linear regression to measure the association between the same determinants and women's dietary diversity score. RESULTS: The analyses found that land ownership, adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR) 0.28 (CI 0.18, 0.42); relative wealth (middle tertile 0.49 (0.29, 0.84) and top tertile 0.18 (0.10, 0.33)); women's literacy 0.64 (0.46, 0.90); access to media 0.49 (0.33, 0.72); and women's freedom to access the market 0.56 (0.36, 0.85) all significantly reduced the risk of food insecurity. Larger households increased the risk of food insecurity, adjusted RRR 1.46 (CI 1.02, 2.09). Households with vegetable gardens 0.20 (0.11, 0.31), rich households 0.46 (0.24, 0.68) and literate women 0.37 (0.20, 0.54) were significantly more likely to have better dietary diversity scores. CONCLUSION: Household food insecurity remains a key public health problem in Bangladesh, with households suffering food shortages for an average of one quarter of the year. Simple survey and analytical methods are able to identify numerous interlinked factors associated with household food security, but wealth and literacy were the only two determinants associated with both improved food security and dietary diversity. We cannot conclude whether improvements in all determinants are necessarily needed to improve household food security, but new and existing policies that relate to these determinants should be designed and monitored with the knowledge that they could substantially influence the food security and nutritional status of the population.


Subject(s)
Diet, Healthy , Diet , Food Supply , Patient Compliance , Rural Health , Women's Health , Adolescent , Adult , Bangladesh , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diet/ethnology , Diet/psychology , Diet, Healthy/economics , Diet, Healthy/ethnology , Diet, Healthy/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Female , Food Supply/economics , Gardening/economics , Humans , Literacy/ethnology , Literacy/psychology , Middle Aged , Nutrition Surveys , Patient Compliance/ethnology , Patient Compliance/psychology , Poverty/economics , Poverty/ethnology , Poverty/psychology , Power, Psychological , Rural Health/economics , Rural Health/ethnology , Seasons , Socioeconomic Factors , Women's Health/economics , Women's Health/ethnology , Young Adult
13.
Aust N Z J Public Health ; 38(3): 235-40, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24890481

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This pilot study aimed to determine the feasibility of a novel, low-cost program to get remote schools started in gardening and nutrition activities, for a lower cost than existing models, and without on-the-ground horticultural support. METHODS: A multi-site, mixed methods case study was undertaken, in which four remote schools were shipped gardening materials and a nutrition and cooking resource, and provided with horticultural support by phone and email. A support register and teacher surveys were used for four months of evaluation. RESULTS: The study demonstrated that the program is feasible, and may be associated with an increase from baseline in student's time spent cooking, gardening and on related classroom activities. CONCLUSIONS: The program was delivered economically without the need for on-the-ground staff, in a manner that was acceptable to teachers. IMPLICATIONS: This model may have application in remote schools throughout Australia, where there is a need to alter health impacting behaviours in high-risk populations. Lengthier program evaluation times and further resource development may be worth investigating in the future.


Subject(s)
Gardening/economics , Health Promotion/methods , Program Evaluation/methods , Students , Adolescent , Adult , Australia , Child , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Female , Health Promotion/economics , Humans , Male , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander , Nutritional Status , Pilot Projects , Schools
14.
J Acad Nutr Diet ; 114(7): 1072-1076, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24751664

ABSTRACT

Urban dwellers across the United States increasingly access a variety of fresh vegetables through participation in neighborhood-level community gardens. Here we document vegetable output and cost savings of community gardens in the city of San Jose, CA, to better understand the capacity of community gardens to affect food affordability in an urban setting. A convenience sample of 83 community gardeners in San Jose completed a background survey during spring and summer 2012. On average, gardeners were aged 57 years and had a monthly income of $4,900; 25% had completed college. A representative subset of 10 gardeners was recruited to weigh vegetable output of their plots using portable electronic scales at three separate garden sites. Accuracy of each portable scale was verified by comparing the weight of a sample vegetable to weights obtained using a lab scale precise to 0.2 oz. Garden yields and cost savings were tabulated overall for each plot. Results indicate that community garden practices are more similar to biointensive high-production farming, producing 0.75 lb vegetables/sq ft, rather than conventional agricultural practices, producing 0.60 lb/sq ft. Gardens produced on average 2.55 lb/plant and saved $435 per plot for the season. Results indicate that cost savings are greatest if vertical high value crops such as tomatoes and peppers are grown in community gardens, although yields depend on growing conditions, gardener's skill, availability of water, and other factors. Future research is needed to document cost savings and yields for specific crops grown in community gardens.


Subject(s)
Cost Savings , Crops, Agricultural/economics , Gardening/economics , Vegetables , California , Data Collection , Humans , Income , Pilot Projects
15.
Int J Drug Policy ; 25(1): 71-80, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23561719

ABSTRACT

The life and death of California's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP, 1983-2012) offers a unique analytical window into the time and space of the U.S. war on drugs in a global context. This paper draws on CAMP report archives, ethnographic interviews, and secondary data sources to locate the significance of CAMP, its demise, and enduring legacy for the political economy of domestic illicit cannabis production in southern Humboldt County, where it was initially focused. I first introduce the economic geography of cannabis production in southern Humboldt County and California. In the first part of the paper, using theoretical frameworks from Critical Geopolitics and International Relations, I examine the geo-politics of CAMP's emergence. In the second part of the paper, I examine industrial reterritorialization associated with its geographies of enforcement over time. I conclude by discussing the eclipse of its foundational logic-and-practice (policing the "Emerald Triangle") by new political and economic geographies of power.


Subject(s)
Cannabis , Drug and Narcotic Control/economics , Drug and Narcotic Control/legislation & jurisprudence , Gardening/economics , Gardening/legislation & jurisprudence , California , Drug and Narcotic Control/history , Gardening/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Politics , United States
16.
J Agric Food Chem ; 61(39): 9401-11, 2013 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24004410

ABSTRACT

Effects of biomass types (bark mulch versus sugar beet pulp) and carbonization processing conditions (temperature, residence time, and phase of reaction medium) on the chemical characteristics of hydrochars were examined by elemental analysis, solid-state ¹³C NMR, and chemical and biochemical oxygen demand measurements. Bark hydrochars were more aromatic than sugar beet hydrochars produced under the same processing conditions. The presence of lignin in bark led to a much lower biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of bark than sugar beet and increasing trends of BOD after carbonization. Compared with those prepared at 200 °C, 250 °C hydrochars were more aromatic and depleted of carbohydrates. Longer residence time (20 versus 3 h) at 250 °C resulted in the enrichment of nonprotonated aromatic carbons. Both bark and sugar beet pulp underwent deeper carbonization during water hydrothermal carbonization than during steam hydrothermal carbonization (200 °C, 3 h) in terms of more abundant aromatic C but less carbohydrate C in water hydrochars.


Subject(s)
Beta vulgaris/chemistry , Carbohydrates/chemistry , Fertilizers/analysis , Gardening/methods , Plant Bark/chemistry , Plant Roots/chemistry , Soil/chemistry , Carbohydrates/analysis , Fertilizers/economics , Food-Processing Industry/economics , Forestry/economics , Gardening/economics , Hot Temperature , Industrial Waste/analysis , Industrial Waste/economics , Manure , Odorants , Oxygen/chemistry , Steam , Time Factors , Water/chemistry
17.
Dissent ; 59(2): 14, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22834043

ABSTRACT

Americans are in the midst of a food-consciousness revival: on television, in the mouth of the First Lady, in endless articles celebrating urban agriculture can be found a sudden enthusiasm for the politically and, perhaps, spiritually curated dinner table. In this special section, writers explore the perilous state of food and food politics in America and a wide range of responses on the Left. Marion Nestle, in her essay on the farm bill, describes how the existing policy disaster came to be, along with the relationship between Reagan-era deregulation and the obesity epidemic. Mark Engler describes both the successes and coopting of the strands of left-wing responses­buying organic, eating local, and agitating for fair trade­and asks, "What's a radical to eat?" Laurie Woolever uncovers the kind of labor exploitation endemic to the elite dining experience. Karen Bakker Le Billon compares American to French school lunches, unpacking the relationship between food and citizenship. Juliana DeVries explores vegetarianism and the politics of everyday life.


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Attitude to Health , Food Industry , Food Supply , Gardening , Politics , Social Change , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/education , Agriculture/history , Agriculture/legislation & jurisprudence , Attitude to Health/ethnology , Food Industry/economics , Food Industry/education , Food Industry/history , Food Industry/legislation & jurisprudence , Food Supply/economics , Food Supply/history , Food Supply/legislation & jurisprudence , Food, Organic/economics , Food, Organic/history , Gardening/economics , Gardening/education , Gardening/history , Government/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Legislation as Topic/economics , Legislation as Topic/history , Organic Agriculture/economics , Organic Agriculture/education , Organic Agriculture/history , Organic Agriculture/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Change/history
18.
ScientificWorldJournal ; 2012: 350258, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22629136

ABSTRACT

Home gardens are defined as less complex agroforests which look like and function as natural forest ecosystems but are integrated into agricultural management systems located around houses. Investigations were carried out in 187 households. The aim of the study was to identify the different types of banana home gardens existing in the periurban zone of Ngaoundere town. The results showed that the majority of home gardens in the area were very young (less than 15 years old) and very small in size (less than 1 ha). Eleven types of home gardens were found in the periurban area of Ngaoundere town. The different home garden types showed important variations in all their structural characteristics. Two local species of banana are cultivated in the systems, Musa sinensis and Musa paradisiaca. The total banana production is 3.57 tons per year. The total quantity of banana consumed in the periurban zone was 3.54 tons (93.5%) whereas 1.01 tons were sold in local or urban markets. The main banana producers belonged to home gardens 2, 4, 7, and 9. The quantity of banana offered to relatives was more than what the farmers received from others. Farmers, rely on agroforests because the flow of their products helps them consolidate friendship and conserve biodiversity at the same time.


Subject(s)
Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/statistics & numerical data , Fruit/economics , Gardening/economics , Gardening/statistics & numerical data , Musa/growth & development , Trees/growth & development , Guinea , Socioeconomic Factors
19.
Public Health Nutr ; 15(2): 285-90, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21806859

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: California Assembly Bill 1535 awarded $US 15 million to California public schools to promote, develop and sustain instructional school gardens through the California Instructional School Garden Program (CISGP). The present study was designed to assess the effectiveness of the CISGP at assisting schools in implementing, maintaining and sustaining an academic school garden programme, determine how schools utilized the funding they received and assess the impact of the California state budget crisis on the CISGP. DESIGN: A mid-term evaluation was used to assess the degree to which schools achieved their instructional garden-related goals. SETTING: California. SUBJECTS: Only schools that applied for the CIGSP grant as part of a school district and also provided a contact email and had a unique contact person were included in the study (n 3103, 80·6 %). RESULTS: In general, many schools reported not achieving their predicted goals with regard to the CISGP grant. Only 39·4 % of schools reported accomplishing all of their garden-related goals. Over one-third (37·8 %) of schools reported that their school gardens were negatively affected by the California budget deficit. CONCLUSIONS: The difference between predicted and actual utilization of the CISGP grants may be due to a combination of the effects of budget shortfall and insufficiency of the grant award amount.


Subject(s)
Child Nutrition Sciences/education , Gardening/education , Schools , Budgets , California , Child , Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Economic Recession , Female , Gardening/economics , Humans , Male , Program Evaluation , Schools/economics
20.
Bot J Linn Soc ; 166(3): 227-32, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22059246

ABSTRACT

A new international initiative for plant conservation was first called for as a resolution of the International Botanical Congress in 1999. The natural home for such an initiative was considered to be the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the CBD agreed to consider a Global Strategy for Plant Conservation (GSPC) at its 5th meeting in 2000. It was proposed that the GSPC could provide an innovative model approach for target setting within the CBD and, prior to COP5, a series of inter-sessional papers on proposed targets and their justification were developed by plant conservation experts. Key factors that ensured the adoption of the GSPC by the CBD in 2002 included: (1) ensuring that prior to and during COP5, key Parties in each region were supportive of the Strategy; (2) setting targets at the global level and not attempting to impose these nationally; and (3) the offer by Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI) to support a GSPC position in the CBD Secretariat for 3 years, which provided a clear indication of the support for the GSPC from non-governmental organizations (NGO).


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Botany , Conservation of Natural Resources , Ecosystem , Endangered Species , Internationality , Botany/economics , Botany/education , Botany/history , Botany/legislation & jurisprudence , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , Conservation of Natural Resources/legislation & jurisprudence , Endangered Species/economics , Endangered Species/history , Endangered Species/legislation & jurisprudence , Gardening/economics , Gardening/education , Gardening/history , Gardening/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Internationality/history , Internationality/legislation & jurisprudence , Organizations/economics , Organizations/history , Organizations/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Research/economics , Research/education , Research/history
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...