Cultivating the Glocal Garden

This paper addresses the question under which conditions small-scale urban agriculture (UA) initiatives can accelerate a sustainability transition of the global food system. It develops the notion of a glocal garden, a large number of likeminded local initiatives with a global impact and forms of wo...

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Main Author: Matthijs Hisschemoller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Librelloph 2016-04-01
Series:Challenges in Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.librelloph.com/challengesinsustainability/article/view/262
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spelling doaj-0568cfb914644753b52de0847db71d382020-11-24T23:49:32ZengLibrellophChallenges in Sustainability2297-64772016-04-0141283810.12924/cis2016.04010028100Cultivating the Glocal GardenMatthijs Hisschemoller0Dutch Research Institute for Transitions (DRIFT), Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The NetherlandsThis paper addresses the question under which conditions small-scale urban agriculture (UA) initiatives can accelerate a sustainability transition of the global food system. It develops the notion of a glocal garden, a large number of likeminded local initiatives with a global impact and forms of worldwide collaboration. Taking a transition perspective, the glocal garden, producing vegetables and fruits, is a niche that has to overcome barriers to compete with the dominant food regime. Since a sustainability transition restructures (policy) sectors, institutional domains including knowledge systems, the paper explores which innovations are needed for the glocal garden to succeed. It discusses the glocal garden as an environmental, a social, an economic and a global project. As an environmental project, the glocal garden will link sustainable production of food with renewable energy production. As a social project, it will be organized into a consumers’ cooperative. As an economic project, it will strive for profit, increasing the yield in a sustainable manner. As a global project, it will enhance collaboration between local cooperatives in the North and the South, as well as with rural agriculture. Under these conditions, the glocal garden can develop into a power, able to resist a possible future food regime that splits societies, in terms of quality standards and food products, into haves and have-nots.http://www.librelloph.com/challengesinsustainability/article/view/262cooperativeglobal food systemsustainability transitionurban agriculture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthijs Hisschemoller
spellingShingle Matthijs Hisschemoller
Cultivating the Glocal Garden
Challenges in Sustainability
cooperative
global food system
sustainability transition
urban agriculture
author_facet Matthijs Hisschemoller
author_sort Matthijs Hisschemoller
title Cultivating the Glocal Garden
title_short Cultivating the Glocal Garden
title_full Cultivating the Glocal Garden
title_fullStr Cultivating the Glocal Garden
title_full_unstemmed Cultivating the Glocal Garden
title_sort cultivating the glocal garden
publisher Librelloph
series Challenges in Sustainability
issn 2297-6477
publishDate 2016-04-01
description This paper addresses the question under which conditions small-scale urban agriculture (UA) initiatives can accelerate a sustainability transition of the global food system. It develops the notion of a glocal garden, a large number of likeminded local initiatives with a global impact and forms of worldwide collaboration. Taking a transition perspective, the glocal garden, producing vegetables and fruits, is a niche that has to overcome barriers to compete with the dominant food regime. Since a sustainability transition restructures (policy) sectors, institutional domains including knowledge systems, the paper explores which innovations are needed for the glocal garden to succeed. It discusses the glocal garden as an environmental, a social, an economic and a global project. As an environmental project, the glocal garden will link sustainable production of food with renewable energy production. As a social project, it will be organized into a consumers’ cooperative. As an economic project, it will strive for profit, increasing the yield in a sustainable manner. As a global project, it will enhance collaboration between local cooperatives in the North and the South, as well as with rural agriculture. Under these conditions, the glocal garden can develop into a power, able to resist a possible future food regime that splits societies, in terms of quality standards and food products, into haves and have-nots.
topic cooperative
global food system
sustainability transition
urban agriculture
url http://www.librelloph.com/challengesinsustainability/article/view/262
work_keys_str_mv AT matthijshisschemoller cultivatingtheglocalgarden
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