Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T07:08:25.170Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Local food systems and sustainable communities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2009

Gail W. Feenstra
Affiliation:
Analyst and nutritionist at the Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, University of California, Davis, CA 95616; e-mail: gwfeenstra@ucdavis.edu.
Get access

Abstract

The long-term health of a community's food system is an important indicator of its vitality and sustainability. A logical and appropriate way to revitalize a community is by the development of a local food economy. People throughout the United States are designing and implementing sustainable, local food systems that are rooted in particular places, aim to be economically viable for farmers and consumers, use ecologically sound production and distribution practices, and enhance social equity and democracy for all members of the community. This paper reviews the existing literature on local food systems, examines a variety of strategies and initiatives that are currently underway, and identifies steps that community kaders and citizens can use to develop their own local food systems. Finally, I suggest what research is needed to support these community efforts.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Aegerter, B., Along, A., Barnett, E., Coomber, S., Johnson, M., Kile, R., Nielsen, M., Preves, G., Scott, M., Strangler, J., and Woodwell, J.. 1990. Education in a hotter time: The campus and the biosphere in the twenty-first century. Carleton and St. Olaf Colleges, Northfield, Minnesota; Meadowcreek Project, Fox, Arkansas.Google Scholar
2.Arthur D. Little, Inc. 1985. Frontiers for agriculture. An action agenda for New York State, Volume 1. Main report (reference 53235). Henderson, Friedlich, Graf and Doyle, Inc., New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
3.Ashman, L., de la Vega, J., Dohan, M., Fisher, A., Hippler, R., and Romain, B.. 1993. Seeds of Change. Strategies for Food Security for the Inner City. Southern California Interfaith Hunger Coalition, Los Angeles, California.Google Scholar
4.Berry, W. 1977. The Unsettling of America. Culture and Agriculture. Avon Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
5.British Columbia Ministry of Health. 1994. B.C. foods – A rainbow of choices. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.Google Scholar
6.Bruhn, C., Chapman, E., Vaupel, S., and Vossen, P.. 1992. Consumer attitudes toward locally grown produce. California Agriculture 46(4):1318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7.Campbell, L., and Pearman, C.. 1994. Locally produced foods sold in Renfrew County: Survey of food retailers and distributors. Association for Agricultural Self-Reliance – Renfrew County, Renfrew, Ontario.Google Scholar
8.Cantrell, P. 1991. The Food and Agriculture Workbook. Rocky Mountain Institute, Old Snowmass, Colorado.Google Scholar
9.Clancy, K.L. 1994. Local and regional food systems: The role of food policy councils. Presentation at the “Cuisine, Agriculture & Social Change Conference,” a joint annual meeting of the Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society and the Association for the Study of Food and Society, June 9–12, Tucson, Arizona.Google Scholar
10.Community Food Security Coalition. 1995. Community Food Security Empowerment Act, 1995. Hartford Food System, Hartford Connecticut; Sustainable Food Center, Austin, Texas; Dept. of Urban Planning, Univ. of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
11.Cornucopia Project. 1981. Empty Breadbasket? The Coming Challenge to America's Food Supply and What We Can Do About It. Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
12.Cornucopia Project. 1982. Organizing a Local Cornucopia Project: A Manual for Changing Your Food System. Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
13.Cornucopia Project, (undated). Strategies for a Sustainable Food System. Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
14.Crouch, M. 1993. Eating our teachers: Local food, local knowledge. Raise The Stakes: The Planet Drum Review. Planet Drum Foundation, San Francisco, California.Google Scholar
15.Dahlberg, K. 1994. Food policy councils: The experience of five cities and one county. Unpublished discussion paper. Dept. of Political Science, Western Michigan Univ., Kalamazoo.Google Scholar
16.De Boer, J.C., and Schlabach, J.H.. 1981. Primer on Food Stewardship. Joint Strategy and Action Committee, Inc., New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
17.Fricker Group and Sunflower Strategies. 1994. Collective Marketing Strategy for the Humboldt County Food Products Industry. The Fricker Group and Sunflower Strategies, Santa Rosa, California.Google Scholar
18.Getz, A. 1991. Urban foodsheds. Permaculture Activist 7(3):2627.Google Scholar
19.Gottlieb, R., and Fisher, A.. 1996. “First feed the face”: Environmental justice and community food security. Antipode 28(2):193203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20.Granberg-Michaelson, W. 1984. A Worldly Spirituality. Harper and Row Publishers, San Francisco, California.Google Scholar
21.Gussow, J.D. 1978. The Feeding Web: Issues in Nutritional Ecology. Bull Publishing Co. Inc., Palo Alto, California.Google Scholar
22.Gussow, J.D., and Clancy, K.L.. 1986. Dietary guidelines for sustainability. J. Nutrition Education 18(1):15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
23.Hamm, M.W. 1993a. The potential for a localized food supply in New Jersey. Paper presented at the “Environment, Culture, and Food Equity Conference,” organized jointly by the Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society and the Association for the Study of Food in Society, June 3–6, Pennsylvania State Univ., State College.Google Scholar
24.Hamm, M.W. 1993b. Proposal for a student farm at Cook College. Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, New Jersey.Google Scholar
25.Hartford Food System. 1993. Annual report. City of Hartford, Connecticut, Advisory Commission on Food Policy. 1992–1993. Hartford, Connecticut.Google Scholar
26.Hartford Food System. 1994. Hunger in Hartford: Towards a Solution. Working to Rebuild Our Local Food System, (brochure). Hartford Food System, Hartford, Connecticut.Google Scholar
27.Haughton, B. 1982. The cosmopolitan radish: Procedures for constructing a food guide for New York City and State in the year 2020. Doctoral dissertation, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
28.Hendrickson, J.A. 1993. The foodshed: Heuristic device and sustainable alternative to the food system. Paper presented at the “Environment, Culture, and Food Equity Conference,” organized jointly by the Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society and the Association for the Study of Food in Society, June 3–6, Pennsylvania State Univ., State College.Google Scholar
29.Herrin, M., and Gussow, J.D.. 1989. Designing a sustainable regional diet. J. Nutrition Education 21(6):270275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
30.Hightower, J. 1973. Hard Tomatoes, Hard Times. Harper and Brothers, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
31.Hightower, J. 1976. Eat Your Heart Out. Vintage Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
32.Hollander, H. 1983. The Lehigh Valley food system: Opportunities for economic growth. The Cornucopia Project of Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
33.Homeless Garden Project. 1992. The homeless garden project reader. Santa Cruz, California.Google Scholar
34.Joseph, H. 1996. Community food security, agriculture, and the environment: A Massachusetts perspective. In Lockeretz, W. (ed). Environmental Enhancement through Agriculture. School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts Univ., Medford, Massachusetts. pp. 245253.Google Scholar
35.Jubilee Agriculture Ministries. 1994. Of the land, for the land. A bible study on church, land and community. Jubilee Agriculture Ministries, Tempe, Arizona.Google Scholar
36.Junge, S., Ingram, R., and Veerkamp, G.E.. 1995. Impacts of local food systems on communities and agriculture: Reason for the seasons. Progress Rept. to the Univ. of California Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, Davis.Google Scholar
37.Kloppenburg, J. Jr., Hendrickson, J., and Stevenson, G.W.. (1996). Coming in to the foodshed. In Vitek, W. and Jackson, W. (eds.) Rooted in the Land. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut, pp 113123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
38.Kneen, B. 1993. From Land to Mouth. Understanding the Food System. NC Press Limited, Toronto, Canada.Google Scholar
39.Land, Food, and Justice Committee. 1986. There is a Season: Cooking with the Good Things Growing in Michigan. Interfaith Council for Peace, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Google Scholar
40.Lappe, P.M. 1975. Diet for a Small Planet. 10th ed.Ballantine Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
41.Lappe, P.M., and Collins, J.. 1978. Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity. Revised ed. Ballantine Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
42.Lehman, P. 1994. Arcata farm and education project. Progress report to the Univ. of California Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, Davis.Google Scholar
43.Lockeretz, W. 1986. Urban consumers' attitudes towards locally grown produce. Amer. J. Alternative Agric. 1:8388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
44.Lyson, T.A., Gillespie, G.W. Jr., and Hilchey, D.. 1995 Farmers' markets and the local community: Bridging the formal and informal economy. Amer. J. Alternative Agric. 10:108113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
45.Maretzki, A., and Anderson, C. (project co-directors). 1991. The Northeast Network: Food, Agriculture, and Health Policy Education. Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, and Cornell Univ., Ithaca, New York.Google Scholar
46.Massachusetts Audubon Society, (undated). A description of Drumlin Farm's food project. Unpublished project description. Lincoln, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
47.McKnight, J. 1995. The Careless Society. Basic Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
48.Messing, P. 1981. The New York State food system: Growing closer to home. Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
49.Midwest Organic Alliance. 1995. Midwest organic alliance update, vol. 1, issue 1.Google Scholar
50.Minneapolis Food Policy Task Force. 1987. A municipal food policy for Minneapolis: The report of the Minneapolis Food Policy Task Force. Self Reliance Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota.Google Scholar
51.Minnesota Project. 1986. AgMarket search for southeast Minnesota (volume I: executive summary report). The Minnesota Project, Preston, Minnesota.Google Scholar
52.Nayga, R.M. Jr., Govindasamy, R., Wall, T., and Thatch, D.W.. 1995. Characteristics of farmer-to-consumer direct market customers in New Jersey. Dept. of Agricultural Economics and Marketing, Rutgers Cooperative Extension, New Brunswick, New Jersey.Google Scholar
53.Nettleton, J. 1996. Regional farmers' market development as an employment and economic development strategy. In Lockeretz, W. (ed). Environmental Enhancement through Agriculture. School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts Univ., Medford, Massachusetts, pp. 235243.Google Scholar
54.Nuxalk Food and Nutrition Program. 1984. Nuxalk Food and Nutrition Handbook. A Practical Guide to Family Foods and Nutrition Using Native Foods. Malibu Offset Printing Inc., Richmond, British Columbia, Canada.Google Scholar
55.Pahl, E. 1983. The Food System in California: Problems and Prospects in the Land of Plenty. Rodale Press, Emmaus, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
56.PlacerGROWN. 1995. Placer Grown (tabloid). PlacerGROWN, Auburn, California.Google Scholar
57.Presbyterian Eco-Justice Task Force. 1989. Keeping and Healing the Creation. Committee on Social Witness Policy, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Louisville, Kentucky.Google Scholar
58.St. Paul Farmers' Market. 1985. The St. Paul Farmers' Market Cookbook. St. Paul, Minnesota.Google Scholar
59.Sustainable Food Center. 1995. Access denied. An analysis of problems facing East Austin residents in their attempts to obtain affordable, nutritious food. Sustainable Food Center, Austin, Texas.Google Scholar
60.Thomson, J., and Kelvin, R.. 1994. A community systems approach to sustain agriculture in urbanizing environments: Developing a regional marketing infrastructure (final project report). Sustaining Agriculture and Natural Resources in Urbanizing Environments (SANRUE), Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, and Rodale Institute Center, Kutztown, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
61.Toronto Food Policy Council. 1992. 1992 action plan of the Toronto Food Policy Council. Toronto Food Policy Council, Toronto, Canada.Google Scholar
62.Toronto Food Policy Council. 1995. Toronto Food Policy Council Policy manual. Toronto Food Policy Council, Toronto, Canada.Google Scholar
63.Tudge, C. 1980. Future Food: Politics, Philosophy and Recipes for the 21st Century. Harmony Books, New York, N.Y.Google Scholar
64.Wilkins, J., and Bokaer-Smith, J.. 1996. The Northeast Regional Food Guide. Cornell Univ., Ithaca, New York.Google Scholar
65.Yazman, M.B. 1991. A guide to starting a local food project based on the Hendrix College experience. Hendrix College, Conway, Arkansas.Google Scholar
66.Yellow Wood Associates, Inc. 1988. North country region cash crop feasibility study. Yellow Wood Associates, Inc., Fairfield, Vermont.Google Scholar