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A multiscalar, interdisciplinary study of the social and ecological dynamics of urban agriculture in Chicago, IL.

机译:伊利诺伊州芝加哥市城市农业的社会和生态动态的多尺度,跨学科研究。

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摘要

Although always a part of city life, urban agriculture has recently attracted increased attention from diverse groups in the United States, which promote it as a strategy for stimulating economic development, increasing food security and access, and combatting obesity and diabetes, among other social goals. Sites of urban food production, along with other urban landscapes, are also increasingly expected to provide additional ecosystem services, such as stormwater regulation, habitat provisioning, and biodiversity conservation, historically provided by rural areas. This research project employed a mix of quantitative and qualitative methods from the social and natural sciences to explore the spatial, social, and ecological dynamics of urban agriculture in Chicago, IL. The ultimate goal of the project was to develop a foundational understanding of those dynamics as a basis for expanding food production in the city and enhancing its contribution to urban systems at multiple scales.;A first step to developing effective urban agriculture policies and programs at the city, neighborhood, or household level is the accurate mapping of existing sites of food production. Mapping efforts in major U.S. cities have been limited in their focus and methodology. Focusing on public sites of food production, such as community gardens, they have overlooked the actual and potential contribution of private spaces, including home food gardens, to local food systems. In the first phase of the research project, public and private spaces of food production in Chicago were identified and mapped through the manual analysis of high-resolution aerial images in Google Earth in conjunction with the use of ArcGIS. The resulting spatial dataset of 4,648 food production sites demonstrated that urban agriculture is an extensive land use type with wide variations in the distribution of sites across the city. Only 16 percent of sites reported to be community gardening projects by nongovernment organizations and government agencies were determined, through image analysis, to be sites of food production. The production area of home gardens identified by the study exceeded by almost three-fold that of community gardens. Study results suggest opportunities may exist for scaling up existing production networks---including home food gardens---and enhancing community food sovereignty by leveraging local knowledges of urban agriculture.;Results from the mapping study inspired the second phase of the project, which focused on onlot and vacant lot home food gardens. The contributions of these gardens to urban systems in the Global North have been overlooked and understudied, even though their production area may, in the aggregate, far exceed that of other forms of urban agriculture. To begin to address this gap, a mixed methods study of African American, Chinese-origin, and Mexican-origin households with home gardens on Chicago's south side was conducted. (For purposes of this study, a home food garden was defined as a fruit and/or vegetable garden on leased, owned, or borrowed land directly adjacent to the gardener's residence; it may include plantings in containers or on rooftops.) Study methods included in-depth interviews with gardeners and other household members, participant observation, ethnobotanical surveys and garden mapping, and analysis of the chemical and physical properties of garden soils. In 2012, a total of 31 gardeners were surveyed; in 2014, an additional 38 gardeners were interviewed. Study findings indicate home gardening has an array of beneficial effects, contributing to household food budgets and community food systems, community development, the reproduction of cultural identity, and urban biodiversity. The majority of informants in the study were internal or international migrants. For these individuals, gardening, culture-specific food plant assemblages, and the foodways they supported represented a continuation of cultural practices and traditional agroecological knowledges associated with their place of origin. The gardens of some migrant households also harbored urban agrobiodiversity with roots in the Global South.;While in the aggregate the plant richness of gardens in the study was equal to or exceeded that of a reference ecosystem, only a small percentage of the plant species were native to the Chicago region. Home food gardens also had a unique vegetative structure representing a trade-off between food production and structural complexity. They lacked shade trees and a well-developed shrub layer, and Chinese-origin gardens also lacked perennial groundlayer vegetation. The lack of native plant species and vegetative structural complexity in these gardens may limit their contribution to biodiversity at higher tropic levels. Overall, study results suggest that while the home food garden's potential contributions to urban systems are significant, outreach--- particularly to historically underserved minority populations---and additional research of a participatory nature are needed to help gardeners grow food safely and sustainably in ways that contribute to overall ecosystem health. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
机译:尽管都市农业一直是城市生活的一部分,但近来都市农业已引起美国各族人民的越来越多的关注,这促进了都市农业的发展,成为刺激经济发展,增加粮食安全和获取,打击肥胖和糖尿病等战略目标。 。人们也日益期望城市粮食生产场所以及其他城市景观能够提供额外的生态系统服务,例如雨水调节,栖息地供应和生物多样性保护,这些服务历史上是由农村地区提供的。该研究项目采用了社会科学和自然科学相结合的定量和定性方法,以探索伊利诺伊州芝加哥市都市农业的空间,社会和生态动态。该项目的最终目标是发展对这些动态的基础理解,以此为基础扩大城市粮食生产并在多个层面上增强其对城市系统的贡献。第一步,制定有效的城市农业政策和计划城市,邻里或家庭级别是对现有粮食生产地点的准确映射。美国主要城市的地图绘制工作在重点和方法上受到限制。他们将重点放在粮食生产的公共场所,例如社区花园,而忽略了包括家庭菜园在内的私人空间对当地食物系统的实际和潜在贡献。在研究项目的第一阶段,通过对Google Earth中高分辨率航拍图像的手动分析以及ArcGIS的使用,对芝加哥食品生产的公共和私人空间进行了识别和制图。由此产生的4,648个食品生产地点的空间数据集表明,城市农业是一种广泛的土地利用类型,整个城市的地点分布差异很大。通过图像分析,仅16%的非政府组织和政府机构报告为社区园艺项目的场所被确定为粮食生产场所。该研究确定的家庭花园的生产面积几乎是社区花园的三倍。研究结果表明可能存在扩大现有生产网络的机会-包括家庭菜园-并通过利用当地对城市农业的了解来增强社区粮食主权。制图研究的结果启发了该项目的第二阶段,专注于空地和空地家庭食品花园。尽管这些花园的生产面积总体上可能远远超过其他形式的城市农业,但这些花园对全球北部城市系统的贡献却被忽视和研究不足。为了解决这一差距,我们对在芝加哥南侧设有家庭花园的非洲裔美国人,华裔和墨西哥裔家庭进行了混合方法研究。 (出于本研究的目的,家庭菜园被定义为与园丁的住所直接相邻的租赁,拥有或借用土地上的水果和/或蔬菜园;它可能包括在容器中或屋顶上的种植。)研究方法包括与园丁和其他家庭成员的深入访谈,参与者的观察,民族植物学调查和花园测绘以及花园土壤化学和物理特性的分析。 2012年,总共对31名园丁进行了调查。 2014年,又有38位园丁接受了采访。研究结果表明,家庭园艺具有一系列有益的作用,有助于家庭食物预算和社区食物系统,社区发展,文化特征的复制以及城市生物多样性。该研究中的大多数信息提供者是国内或国际移民。对于这些人而言,园艺,特定于文化的食用植物组合以及他们所支持的食道代表了文化习俗和与其起源地相关的传统农业生态知识的延续。一些移民家庭的花园也具有城市农业生物多样性,其根源在全球南部。虽然总体而言,研究中花园的植物丰富度等于或超过参考生态系统,但只有一小部分植物物种是原产于芝加哥地区。家庭菜园还具有独特的营养结构,代表了粮食生产与结构复杂性之间的权衡。他们缺少遮荫树和发达的灌木层,而中国人的花园也缺乏多年生的地层植被。这些花园中缺乏本地植物种类和营养结构复杂性,可能会限制它们在热带地区对生物多样性的贡献。总体而言,研究结果表明,尽管家庭菜园对城市系统的潜在贡献是巨大的,外展活动-尤其是对历来服务不足的少数族裔-以及参与性的其他研究需要帮助园丁以有助于整体生态系统健康的方式安全,可持续地种植食物。 (摘要由UMI缩短。)。

著录项

  • 作者

    Taylor, John R.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.;

  • 授予单位 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.;
  • 学科 Agriculture.;Geography.;Social research.;Agricultural economics.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2014
  • 页码 203 p.
  • 总页数 203
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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