Food and Green Space in Cities: A Resilience Lens on Gardens and Urban Environmental Movements

This article examines the role played by urban gardens during historical collapses in urban food supply lines and identifies the social processes required to protect two critical elements of urban food production during times of crisis—open green spaces and the collective memory of how to grow food. Advanced communication and transport technologies allow food sequestration from the farthest reaches of the planet, but have markedly increasing urban dependence on global food systems over the past 50 years. Simultaneously, such advances have eroded collective memory of food production, while suitable spaces for urban gardening have been lost. These factors combine to heighten the potential for food shortages when—as occurred in the 20th century—major economic, political or environmental crises sever supply lines to urban areas. This paper considers how to govern urban areas sustainably in order to ensure food security in times of crisis by: evincing the effectiveness of urban gardening during crises; showing how allotment gardens serve as conduits for transmitting collective social-ecological memories of food production; and, discussing roles and strategies of urban environmental movements for protecting urban green space. Urban gardening and urban social movements can build local ecological and social response capacity against major collapses in urban food supplies. Hence, they should be incorporated as central elements of sustainable urban development. Urban governance for resilience should be historically informed about major food crises and allow for redundant food production solutions as a response to uncertain futures.

[1]  Carl Folke,et al.  Social-ecological memory in urban gardens-Retaining the capacity for management of ecosystem services , 2010 .

[2]  P. Bolund,et al.  Ecosystem services in urban areas , 1999 .

[3]  E. Wenger Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity , 1998 .

[4]  Örjan Bodin,et al.  Social Networks and Natural Resource Management , 2011 .

[5]  P. Connerton How Societies Remember , 1989 .

[6]  Robert D. Benford,et al.  Master-frames and cycles of protest , 1992 .

[7]  Stephan Barthel,et al.  Civic greening and environmental learning in public-access community gardens in Berlin , 2013 .

[8]  C. Folke,et al.  Navigating social–ecological systems: building resilience for complexity and change: Fikret Berkes, Johan Colding and Carl Folke (Eds.). Cambridge University Press, 2003. xxi + 393 pages. ISBN 0-521-81592-4 (hardback), £65 , 2004 .

[9]  F. Berkes Sacred Ecology: Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Resource Management , 1999 .

[10]  H. Ernstson The social production of ecosystem services: A framework for studying environmental justice and ecological complexity in urbanized landscapes , 2013 .

[11]  M. Polanyi Chapter 7 – The Tacit Dimension , 1997 .

[12]  Thomas Frei,et al.  Theories Of Social Remembering , 2016 .

[13]  V. Nazarea Cultural memory and biodiversity , 1998 .

[14]  J. Larson,et al.  An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations , 2015 .

[15]  E. Andersson,et al.  Scale-Crossing Brokers and Network Governance of Urban Ecosystem Services : The Case of Stockholm , 2010 .

[16]  H. Ernstson Transformative collective action : A network approach to transformative change in ecosystem-based management , 2011 .

[17]  R. Walker,et al.  The Country In The City , 2007 .

[18]  C. P. Goodman,et al.  The Tacit Dimension , 2003 .

[19]  S. Sörlin,et al.  Weaving Protective Stories: Connective Practices to Articulate Holistic Values in the Stockholm National Urban Park , 2009 .

[20]  Carole L. Crumley,et al.  Research, part of a Special Feature on Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Global Environmental Change Biocultural Refugia: Combating the Erosion of Diversity in Landscapes of Food Production , 2013 .

[21]  Peter Hall,et al.  The global city , 2010 .

[22]  Carole L. Crumley,et al.  Historical Ecology: Cultural Knowledge and Changing Landscapes. , 1996 .

[23]  J. Climo,et al.  Social memory and history : anthropological perspectives , 2002 .

[24]  R. Quinn,et al.  Accurate Mental Maps as an Aspect of Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK): a Case Study from Lough Neagh, Northern Ireland , 2008 .

[25]  Christopher Ansell,et al.  COMMUNITY EMBEDDEDNESS AND COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT , 2003 .

[26]  Lewis A. Coser,et al.  Collective Memory , 2022, Progress in Brain Research.

[27]  D. Leonard,et al.  The Role of Tacit Knowledge in Group Innovation , 1998 .

[28]  M. Castells The City and Grassroots , 1983 .

[29]  J. Colding,et al.  The potential of ‘Urban Green Commons’ in the resilience building of cities , 2013 .

[30]  Stephan Barthel,et al.  Innovative Memory and Resilient Cities : Echoes from Ancient Constantinople , 2010 .

[31]  Stuart Lowe The City and the Grassroots , 1986 .

[32]  P. Moustier Urban horticulture in Africa and Asia, an efficient corner food supplier , 2007 .

[33]  J. D. McCarthy,et al.  Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial Theory , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[34]  T. Elmqvist,et al.  Social Movements and Ecosystem Services—the Role of Social Network Structure in Protecting and Managing Urban Green Areas in Stockholm , 2008 .

[35]  Timothy O'Riordan,et al.  Green networks , 1994, Nature.

[36]  C. Webster,et al.  Enclosure of the urban commons , 2006 .

[37]  M. Visser,et al.  Great tits can reduce caterpillar damage in apple orchards , 2002 .

[38]  C. Steel Hungry City: How Food Shapes Our Lives , 2008 .

[39]  S. Sassen The Global City , 1992 .

[40]  S. Barthel,et al.  Recalling Urban Nature : Linking City People to Ecosystem Services , 2008 .

[41]  C. Isendahl,et al.  Urban gardens, agriculture, and water management: Sources of resilience for long-term food security in cities , 2013 .

[42]  James R. Miller Biodiversity conservation and the extinction of experience. , 2005, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[43]  Mario Diani,et al.  Introduction: Social Movements, Contentious Actions, and Social Networks: ‘From Metaphor to Substance ’? , 2003 .

[44]  D. Conradson Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference , 1998 .

[45]  D. Snow,et al.  Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment , 2000 .

[46]  Lisa Deutsch,et al.  Global trade, food production and ecosystem support Making the interactions visible , 2004 .

[47]  P. Connerton How societies remember: Contents , 1989 .

[48]  D. Crouch,et al.  The Allotment: Its Landscape and Culture , 1988 .

[49]  D. Rees Agriculture at the crossroads. , 1990 .

[50]  C. Folke,et al.  Urban Gardens: Pockets of Social-Ecological Memory , 2014 .

[51]  T. Elmqvist,et al.  Urban Transitions: On Urban Resilience and Human-Dominated Ecosystems , 2010, AMBIO.

[52]  C. Williams,et al.  The Role of Domestic Food Production in Everyday Life in Post-Soviet Ukraine , 2010 .

[53]  Jack A. Heinemann,et al.  Agriculture at a Crossroads , 2008, Science.

[54]  Andrew Rimas,et al.  Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations , 2010 .

[55]  Etienne Wenger,et al.  Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity , 1998 .

[56]  D. Dennis,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 1998 .

[57]  E. Andersson,et al.  Measuring social-ecological dynamics behind the generation of ecosystem services. , 2007, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.

[58]  Joseph A. Tainter,et al.  The way the wind blows : climate, history, and human action , 2000 .

[59]  D. Harvey,et al.  The Condition of Postmodernity , 2020, The New Social Theory Reader.

[60]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Panarchy Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems , 2002 .

[61]  Julia Wright,et al.  Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security in an Era of Oil Scarcity: Lessons from Cuba , 2008 .