Department of Religious Studies, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.
Department of Sociology and Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.
Front Public Health. 2023 Jul 6;11:1147967. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1147967. eCollection 2023.
For quite some time, food systems scholars, public health workers, and food justice activists have recognized structural problems in the global food system that can cause food insecurity and inequitable access to nutritious foods. The COVID-19 pandemic and the accompanying disruption in food supply chains (FSCs) exposed these problems and raised questions about how community gardening and urban agriculture might offer some solutions. In this article, we examine the effects of the pandemic on the operations of community gardens in Central Florida and the attempts of these gardens to address the disruption in food supplies in their local communities. We do so by using data drawn from two research strategies employed by the members of University of South Florida's Urban Food Sovereignty Group: (1) a survey conducted in 2021 of 45 leaders of community gardens throughout the Central Florida region; and (2) participation in the meetings and activities of a coalition of community gardens based in Tampa, Florida, from 2019 to 2022. Results reveal that although most community gardens in Central Florida were forced to change their routines in various ways (e.g., limiting the number of workers or volunteers who could work at the garden at the same time, or delivering workshops and education programs online instead of in-person), some gardens were able to maintain their regular operations and even reported increases in their membership or participation during the pandemic. Many community garden leaders also recognized the positive effect that community gardening seemed to have on their gardeners' mental health, noting that their gardens became places of refuge for gardeners who sought safe, outdoor spaces, to relieve stress and interact with their neighbors. These same leaders also observed the effect of the pandemic on residents' access to quality food, and intensified their efforts to provide more fresh food to pantries and traditional emergency food outlets. Survey respondents also shared important lessons they learned from the pandemic by suggesting that community gardens establish clear emergency protocols, use existing resources more efficiently, continue their educational programs, and strengthen their communications and cooperation with other gardens and actors in local food supply chains in order to ensure food security. We conclude by suggesting that one of the best ways that local communities can avert future food crises and strengthen their resilience is to root themselves more firmly in the principles of food sovereignty so they can sustain themselves when commercial FSCs are disrupted.
在相当长的一段时间里,食品系统学者、公共卫生工作者和食品正义活动家已经认识到全球食品系统中的结构性问题,这些问题可能导致粮食不安全和获得营养食品的机会不平等。COVID-19 大流行以及随之而来的食品供应链(FSCs)中断暴露了这些问题,并引发了关于社区园艺和城市农业如何提供一些解决方案的问题。在本文中,我们考察了大流行对中佛罗里达州社区花园运营的影响,以及这些花园试图解决当地社区食品供应中断的问题。我们通过使用南佛罗里达大学城市粮食主权小组成员采用的两种研究策略的数据来做到这一点:(1)2021 年对中佛罗里达州 45 个社区花园领导人的调查;(2)从 2019 年到 2022 年,参与佛罗里达州坦帕市一个社区花园联盟的会议和活动。结果表明,尽管中佛罗里达州的大多数社区花园都被迫以各种方式改变其常规(例如,限制同时在花园工作的工人或志愿者人数,或在线上而不是亲自举办研讨会和教育计划),但一些花园能够维持其正常运营,甚至在大流行期间报告其成员或参与人数有所增加。许多社区花园的领导人还认识到社区园艺对他们的园丁心理健康产生的积极影响,指出他们的花园成为那些寻求安全、户外空间以缓解压力并与邻居互动的园丁的避难所。这些同样的领导人也观察到大流行对居民获得优质食品的影响,并加强努力向食品储藏室和传统紧急食品供应点提供更多新鲜食品。调查受访者还通过提出社区花园建立明确的紧急协议、更有效地利用现有资源、继续其教育计划以及加强与当地食品供应链中的其他花园和参与者的沟通和合作等建议,分享了他们从大流行中吸取的重要经验教训,以确保粮食安全。我们的结论是,地方社区避免未来粮食危机和增强其弹性的最佳方法之一是更坚定地扎根于粮食主权原则,以便在商业食品供应链中断时维持自身。