This article examines the role of manual work in bridging the distance between production and consumption in alternative agro-food economies, particularly in urban farming. Scholars and public commentators often draw on Marxian theories of alienation to suggest that manual work constitutes a key strategy for reconnecting production and consumption, and overcoming the ecological rift between natural processes and modern, agro-industrial production. Focusing on urban farming, this article complicates the picture of unalienated, decommodified labor and points to continuous negotiations between experiences of re-embedding in the community and the environment, and the on-going commodification of the farming experience. We argue that urban farms ...
Historically, urban agriculture has been a way to supplement a city’s food supply. As populations co...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Helen Murphey studies community creation and social relations in a Detroit inner-city farm
The variegated landscape of food production and consumption reveals a great deal about socionatural ...
Urban Agriculture is an accepted practice in many cities and countries, and has attracted a broad cr...
Urban agriculture takes many forms. Often, the term elicits images of raised beds, hoop houses, and,...
This is a study on Alternative Food Networks (AFNs) based on five months of participant observation ...
The prominence of urban agriculture within the United States has increased due to an effort to allev...
Driven by social and environmental criticism of the conventional agro-food system, food is now highl...
In recent years, urban contexts and urban-rural linkages have become central for scholars and activi...
The contemporary interest in urban cultivation in the global North as a component of sustainable foo...
Agricultural geography has remained largely trapped in a neoclassical economic paradigm in which far...
In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture...
Cities and agriculture seem two incompatible worlds. Yet we are seeing more and more urban agricultu...
Urban agriculture has enjoyed renewed popularity across North America over the past few years due to...
Historically, urban agriculture has been a way to supplement a city’s food supply. As populations co...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Helen Murphey studies community creation and social relations in a Detroit inner-city farm
The variegated landscape of food production and consumption reveals a great deal about socionatural ...
Urban Agriculture is an accepted practice in many cities and countries, and has attracted a broad cr...
Urban agriculture takes many forms. Often, the term elicits images of raised beds, hoop houses, and,...
This is a study on Alternative Food Networks (AFNs) based on five months of participant observation ...
The prominence of urban agriculture within the United States has increased due to an effort to allev...
Driven by social and environmental criticism of the conventional agro-food system, food is now highl...
In recent years, urban contexts and urban-rural linkages have become central for scholars and activi...
The contemporary interest in urban cultivation in the global North as a component of sustainable foo...
Agricultural geography has remained largely trapped in a neoclassical economic paradigm in which far...
In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture...
Cities and agriculture seem two incompatible worlds. Yet we are seeing more and more urban agricultu...
Urban agriculture has enjoyed renewed popularity across North America over the past few years due to...
Historically, urban agriculture has been a way to supplement a city’s food supply. As populations co...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Helen Murphey studies community creation and social relations in a Detroit inner-city farm