都市农业的灯塔:大学、社区和重新定义食品系统中的专业知识

M. Wit
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本文提出了农业生态“灯塔”的概念,作为学习和参与城市粮食生产原则和实践的公民空间。由于城市化有可能鼓励农业进一步工业化,在城市种植粮食有望缓解这种压力,同时为社区赋权创造新的机会,并使人们更容易获得可持续、健康和负担得起的粮食。我认为,这种转变将要求社会关系在科学、实践和运动之间架起桥梁,并以令人惊讶的方式跨越大学和社区之间的传统界限。根据最近在加州伯克利的城市农业生态学短期课程中的经验,我通过描述湾区一个后院花园的管理员来说明这种关系可能是什么样子的。这个城市种植者流露出詹姆斯·斯科特所说的梅蒂斯,流畅地跨越制度界限,试验农业生态创新,并提供他的空间作为参与式学习的灯塔。有趣的是,他不是博士,而是一名退休的邮政工人。随着城乡之间粮食安全进展的利害关系越来越大,农业生态灯塔为新的研究人员-农民伙伴关系开辟了潜力,也为扩大我们认为合法的知识制造社区提供了一种手段。我提出了“灯塔扩展模型”的概念,挑战了主流合作扩展的话语,认为一个更平等的食物系统可能会从那些传统上被排除在塑造它之外的人的参与中出现。
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A Lighthouse for Urban Agriculture: University, Community, and Redefining Expertise in the Food System
This article advances the concept of the agroecological “lighthouse” as a civic space for learning and participating in the principles and practices of urban food production. As urbanization threatens to encourage the increased industrialization of agriculture, growing food in cities promises to alleviate this pressure while creating new opportunities for community empowerment and greater access to sustainable, healthy, and affordable food. This kind of transition, I argue, will demand social relations that bridge science, practice, and movement—and that cut in surprising ways across traditional boundaries between university and community. Drawing from a recent experience in an Urban Agroecology shortcourse in Berkeley, California, I illustrate what such relationships might look like, profiling the caretaker of one backyard garden in the Bay Area. This urban grower effuses what James Scott calls metis , moving fluidly across institutional boundaries, experimenting with agroecological innovations, and offering his space as a lighthouse commons for participatory learning. Interestingly, he is not a PhD, but a retired postal worker. With the stakes mounting for progress in food security across the urban-rural divide, the agroecological lighthouse opens up potential for new researcher-farmer partnerships as well as a means for expanding what we consider legitimate knowledge-making communities. Advancing the notion of a “lighthouse extension model,” I challenge the discourse of mainstream cooperative extension, arguing that a more egalitarian food system will likely emerge from participation by those traditionally excluded from shaping it.
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