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社区解决方案应对食品种族隔离:费城社区粮食种植空间与社区人口统计学的空间分析。

Community solutions to food apartheid: A spatial analysis of community food-growing spaces and neighborhood demographics in Philadelphia.

机构信息

The Ubuntu Center on Racism, Global Movements, and Population Health Equity, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, United States; Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Community Health and Prevention, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, United States; Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, United States.

Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2022 Oct;310:115221. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115221. Epub 2022 Aug 5.

Abstract

Black and low-income neighborhoods tend to have higher concentrations of fast-food restaurants and low produce supply stores. Limited access to and consumption of nutrient-rich foods is associated with poor health outcomes. Given the realities of food access, many members within the Black communities grow food as a strategy of resistance to food apartheid, and for the healing and self-determination that agriculture offers. In this paper, we unpack the history of Black people, agriculture, and land in the United States. In addition to our brief historical review, we conduct a descriptive epidemiologic study of community food-growing spaces, food access, and neighborhood racial composition in present day Philadelphia. We leverage one of the few existing datasets that systematically documents community food-growing locations throughout a major US city. By applying spatial regression techniques, we use conditional autoregressive models to determine if there are spatial associations between Black neighborhoods, poverty, food access, and urban agriculture in Philadelphia. Fully adjusted spatial models showed significant associations between Black neighborhoods and urban agriculture (RR: 1.28, 95% CI = 1.03, 1.59) and poverty and urban agriculture (RR: 1.27, 95% CI = 1.1, 1.46). The association between low food access and the presence of urban agriculture was generally increased across neighborhoods with a higher proportion of Black residents. These results show that Philadelphia neighborhoods with higher populations of Black people and neighborhoods with lower incomes, on average, tend to have more community gardens and urban farms. While the garden data is non-temporal and non-causal, one possible explanation for these findings, in alignment with what Philadelphia growers have claimed, is that urban agriculture may be a manifestation of collective agency and community resistance in Black and low-income communities, particularly in neighborhoods with low food access.

摘要

黑人聚居区和低收入社区往往有更多的快餐店和低农产品供应商店。获得和消费营养丰富的食物的机会有限,与健康状况不佳有关。考虑到获得食物的实际情况,许多黑人社区的成员种植食物作为抵制食物种族隔离的一种策略,也是为了农业提供的治愈和自决。在本文中,我们阐述了美国黑人、农业和土地的历史。除了简短的历史回顾外,我们还对当今费城的社区食品种植空间、食品获取和邻里种族构成进行了描述性流行病学研究。我们利用了为数不多的现有数据集之一,该数据集系统地记录了美国主要城市的社区食品种植地点。通过应用空间回归技术,我们使用条件自回归模型来确定费城的黑人社区、贫困、食品获取和城市农业之间是否存在空间关联。完全调整后的空间模型显示,黑人社区与城市农业之间存在显著关联(RR:1.28,95%CI=1.03,1.59),贫困与城市农业之间也存在显著关联(RR:1.27,95%CI=1.1,1.46)。在黑人居民比例较高的社区中,低食物获取与城市农业存在的关联普遍增加。这些结果表明,费城黑人人口比例较高和收入较低的社区平均拥有更多的社区花园和城市农场。虽然花园数据没有时间性和因果关系,但这些发现的一个可能解释是,与费城种植者声称的一致,城市农业可能是黑人社区和低收入社区集体机构和社区抵抗的表现,尤其是在食物获取机会较少的社区。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9ac8/11253559/4b5bb32fa735/nihms-1996699-f0001.jpg

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