Remaking the North American Food System

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Remaking the North American Food System

Strategies for Sustainability

Edited by C. Clare Hinrichs and Thomas A. Lyson

Our Sustainable Future Series

384 pages
6 maps, figure, 27 tables, index

Paperback

July 2009

978-0-8032-2790-3

$29.95 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

January 2008

978-0-8032-1578-8

$29.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

Food and agriculture are in the news daily. Stories in the media highlight issues of abundance, deprivation, pleasure, risk, health, community, and identity. Remaking the North American Food System examines the resurgence of interest in rebuilding the links between agricultural production and food consumption as a way to overcome some of the negative implications of industrial and globalizing trends in the food and agricultural system.
 
Written by a diverse group of scholars and practitioners, the chapters in this volume describe the many efforts throughout North America to craft and sustain alternative food systems that can improve social, economic, environmental, and health outcomes. With examples from Puerto Rico to Oregon to Quebec, this volume offers a broad North American perspective attuned to trends toward globalization at the level of markets and governance and shows how globalization affects the specific localities. The contributors make the case that food can no longer be taken for granted or viewed in isolation. Rather, food should be considered in its connection to community vitality, cultural survival, economic development, social justice, environmental quality, ecological integrity, and human health.

Author Bio

C. Clare Hinrichs, an associate professor of rural sociology at Pennsylvania State University, has published numerous articles on rural sociology and agriculture. Thomas A. Lyson (1948–2006) was the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Development Sociology and director of the Community, Food, and Agriculture Program at Cornell University. He is the author of Civic Agriculture: Reconnecting Farm, Food, and Community.
 
Contributors: Elizabeth Barham, Jim Bingen, Troy C. Blanchard, Holly Born, Linda Brewer, Viviana Carro-Figueroa, Kate Clancy, Laura B. DeLind, Gail Feenstra, Gilbert W. Gillespie Jr., Amy Guptill, Michael W. Hamm, Janet Hammer, Alison H. Harmon, Duncan L. Hilchey, C. Clare Hinrichs, Matthew Hoffman, Raymond A. Jussaume Jr., Larry Lev, Sharon Lezberg, Debra Lippoldt, Thomas A. Lyson, Audrey N. Maretzki, Todd L. Matthews, Marcia Ruth Ostrom, Kathryn Ruhf, Garry Stephenson, G. W. Stevenson, Joan S. Thomson, Elizabeth Tuckermanty, and Jennifer Wilkins

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments   000

Introduction: Practice and Place in Remaking the Food System      000

C. Clare Hinrichs

Part I: What's Wrong with the Food System? Orienting Frameworks for Change

1. Civic Agriculture and the North American Food System     000

Thomas A. Lyson

2. Warrior, Builder, and Weaver Work: Strategies for Changing the Food System 000

G. W. Stevenson, Kathryn Ruhf, Sharon Lezberg, and Kate Clancy

Part II: Institutions and Practices to Remake the Food System

3. Farmers' Markets as Keystones in Rebuilding Local and Regional Food Systems      000

Gilbert Gillespie, Duncan L. Hilchey, C. Clare Hinrichs, and Gail Feenstra

4. Practical Research Methods to Enhance Farmers' Markets   000

Larry Lev, Garry Stephenson, and Linda Brewer

5. Community Supported Agriculture as an Agent of Change: Is It Working?      000

Marcia Ruth Ostrom

6. Food Policy Councils: Past, Present, and Future    000

Kate Clancy, Janet Hammer, and Debra Lippoldt

7. The "Red Label" Poultry System in France: Lessons for Renewing an Agriculture-of-the-Middle in the United States   000

G. W. Stevenson and Holly Born

8. Eating Right Here: The Role of Dietary Guidance in Remaking Community-Based Food Systems      000

Jennifer Wilkins

9. Community-Initiated Dialogue: Strengthening the Community through the Local Food System      000

Joan S. Thomson, Audrey N. Maretzki, and Alison H. Harmon

Part III: The Importance of Place and Region in Remaking the Food System

10. Retail Concentration, Food Deserts, and Food-Disadvantaged Communities in Rural America      000

Troy C. Blanchard and Todd L. Matthews

11. Localization in a Global Context: Invigorating Local Communities in Michigan through the Food System 000

Michael W. Hamm

12. Assessing the Significance of Direct Farmer-Consumer Linkages as a Change Strategy in Washington State: Civic or Opportunistic? 000

Marcia Ruth Ostrom and Raymond A. Jussaume, Jr.

13. Emerging Farmers' Markets and the Globalization of Food Retailing: A Perspective from Puerto Rico 000

Viviana Carro-Figueroa and Amy Guptill

14. The Lamb That Roared: Origin-Labeled Products as Place-Making Strategy in Charlevoix, Quebec      000

Elizabeth Barham

15. Be Careful What You Wish For: Democratic Challenges and Political Opportunities for the Michigan Organic Community    000

Laura B. DeLind and Jim Bingen

16. The Social Foundation of Sustainable Agriculture in Southeastern Vermont  000

Matthew Hoffman

17. Community Food Projects and Food System Sustainability  000

Audrey N. Maretzki and Elizabeth Tuckermanty

Conclusion: A Full Plate: Challenges and Opportunities in Remaking the Food System  000

C. Clare Hinrichs and Elizabeth Barham

List of Contributors    000

Index 000