In the context of food transition studies scant attention has been given to the role of state authorities (be they local or national) in destabilizing the dominant food regime. Specifically, little is known about how state-based regime actors use the power at their disposal to bring about change “from within”. Using a political economy approach and data from qualitative research with local government actors in 10 European cities, this paper explores the different power instruments utilized by (local) government authorities to undermine the material, organizational and discursive base of the (conventional) agri-food regime. What emerges from our research is that local authorities have used a mix of discursive, material and organizational too...
Moving beyond the methodological ‘cityism’ of urban food scholarship, in this paper we focus on the ...
Over the last decade, in cities and city‐regions around the world there has been a multiplication of...
This study explores multi-sectoral perspectives on integrated food policy, with reference to food en...
In the context of food transition studies scant attention has been given to the role of state author...
In the context of food transition studies scant attention has been given to the role of state author...
Drawing upon Urban Political Ecology and recent developments around place-based approaches to food s...
Given the importance that current food-related challenges pose to our society, the potential of loca...
This contribution presents the analytical framework, research set-up and initial empirical operation...
An emerging literature recognizes cities as the optimal scale for food policy innovation, pointing t...
In a context of increasing urbanization, cities have become key sites for rebuilding food systems in...
Cities are positioned as critical actors in agri-food sustainability transitions through the impleme...
Cities have begun to develop a more “place-based approach” to food policy that emphasizes translocal...
Food insecurity is increasingly ‘bimodal’, encompassing issues of quantity and quality, under- and o...
Cities are becoming key transition spaces where new food governance systems are being fashioned, cre...
Moving beyond the methodological ‘cityism’ of urban food scholarship, in this paper we focus on the ...
Over the last decade, in cities and city‐regions around the world there has been a multiplication of...
This study explores multi-sectoral perspectives on integrated food policy, with reference to food en...
In the context of food transition studies scant attention has been given to the role of state author...
In the context of food transition studies scant attention has been given to the role of state author...
Drawing upon Urban Political Ecology and recent developments around place-based approaches to food s...
Given the importance that current food-related challenges pose to our society, the potential of loca...
This contribution presents the analytical framework, research set-up and initial empirical operation...
An emerging literature recognizes cities as the optimal scale for food policy innovation, pointing t...
In a context of increasing urbanization, cities have become key sites for rebuilding food systems in...
Cities are positioned as critical actors in agri-food sustainability transitions through the impleme...
Cities have begun to develop a more “place-based approach” to food policy that emphasizes translocal...
Food insecurity is increasingly ‘bimodal’, encompassing issues of quantity and quality, under- and o...
Cities are becoming key transition spaces where new food governance systems are being fashioned, cre...
Moving beyond the methodological ‘cityism’ of urban food scholarship, in this paper we focus on the ...
Over the last decade, in cities and city‐regions around the world there has been a multiplication of...
This study explores multi-sectoral perspectives on integrated food policy, with reference to food en...