Home
Scholarly Works
Just Urban Food Systems: A New Direction for Food...
Journal article

Just Urban Food Systems: A New Direction for Food Access and Urban Social Justice

Abstract

Abstract Food geography has exploded as a subfield of human geography in recent years; however, normative ideas of justice are not always explicitly addressed. The concept of a ‘just urban food system’ can incorporate ideals of justice into the issue of declining retail food accessibility for low‐income urban communities –‘food deserts’– which have yet to be analysed through a lens of justice. In this article, I review geographers’ and planners’ research on changing urban food landscapes; I also discuss ways that food scholars have implicitly and explicitly addressed normative frameworks, such as food justice, food democracy, food sovereignty and the moral economy. I conclude with three potential research agendas to encourage research on the just urban food system: collective consumption, urban public/private property struggles and the just city.

Authors

Bedore M

Journal

Geography Compass, Vol. 4, No. 9, pp. 1418–1432

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

September 21, 2010

DOI

10.1111/j.1749-8198.2010.00383.x

ISSN

1749-8198

Contact the Experts team