University of California, Merced, CA, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2021 Apr;48(2):160-168. doi: 10.1177/1090198120950617. Epub 2020 Aug 18.
Alternative food programs have been proposed as solutions to food insecurity and diet-related health issues. However, some of the most popular programs-farmers markets and community-supported agriculture-overwhelmingly serve White and upper-middle-class individuals, exacerbating food security and health disparities. One explanation for the mismatch is the way in which alternative food programs are framed: Language used to encourage participation may reflect priorities of upper-middle-class and White populations who create and run these programs while lacking resonance with food-insecure populations. This literature, however, lacks consideration of how lower-cost, more participatory programs-community gardens-are framed. We therefore explore the framing of community gardens through a quantitative content analysis of the descriptions, missions, and goals provided by community garden managers across Minnesota ( = 411).
Six frames were consistently present in the community garden statements: greater good, community orientation, healthy food access, food donation, self-empowerment, and symbolic food labels. Greater good and community orientation were significantly more likely to be used than any other frames.
Taken together, our findings suggest that community gardens may be welcoming toward a diversity of participants but still have room to improve the inclusivity of their frames. The common use of a community orientation suggests the unique ability of community gardens among alternative food programs to benefit Black, Latino, and working-class populations. However, the most common frame observed was "greater good," suggesting one mechanism through which community gardens, like other types of alternative food programs, may be reproducing inequality through alienation of food-insecure populations.
替代食品计划被提议作为解决粮食不安全和饮食相关健康问题的方案。然而,一些最受欢迎的计划——农贸市场和社区支持农业——绝大多数服务于白人和中上阶层的个人,加剧了粮食安全和健康方面的差距。造成这种不匹配的一个原因是替代食品计划的框架方式:用于鼓励参与的语言可能反映了创建和运营这些计划的中上阶层和白人的优先事项,而这些优先事项与粮食不安全人群缺乏共鸣。然而,这一文献缺乏对低成本、更具参与性的计划——社区花园——的框架是如何构建的考虑。因此,我们通过对明尼苏达州(= 411)的社区花园经理提供的描述、使命和目标进行定量内容分析,探讨了社区花园的框架。
在社区花园的陈述中,六个框架始终存在:更大的利益、社区导向、获得健康食品、食品捐赠、自我赋权和象征性的食品标签。更大的利益和社区导向比任何其他框架更有可能被使用。
总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,社区花园可能对各种参与者都表示欢迎,但在其框架的包容性方面仍有改进的空间。社区导向的共同使用表明,社区花园在替代食品计划中具有独特的能力,可以使黑人和拉丁裔以及工人阶级受益。然而,观察到的最常见的框架是“更大的利益”,这表明社区花园与其他类型的替代食品计划一样,可能通过使粮食不安全人群疏远而通过异化来复制不平等。