1. Where We Live, Work, Eat and Play: Approaching Food from an Environmental Justice Perspective.
- Author
-
Alkon, Alison Hope
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,RACE discrimination ,FOOD ,RACISM - Abstract
Abstract: Environmental justice approaches to the subject of food production have largely examined the presence of environmental toxins on agricultural land where low income people and people of color live, work and play. This paper contends that the production and consumption of food itself constitutes an important environmental justice issue. Within the United States communities of color are actively denied access to the means of food production through political and institutional practices of exclusion, racism and economic disadvantage. Additionally, elites enjoy disproportionate access to fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean protein, contributing to disproportionate rates of diet related health problems in low income people and people of color. An analysis of the relationship between environmental injustice and access to healthy food is foreshadowed by current scholarship in environmental justice, sustainable agriculture and food security. I bring these literatures together to contextualize land loss by African-American farmers, lack of access to grocery stores in low-income African American communities, and disproportionate rates of diet related health problems. My ethnographic highlights the work of a collaborative of organizations working against these obstacles in an urban African-American community. I then explore theoretical benefits that flow from the confluence of environmental justice and food scholarship and conclude by suggesting other avenues for research. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006