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Fixes that Fail: A system archetype for examining racialized structures within the food system

Elizabeth Benninger, Gwendolyn Donley, Megan Schmidt‐Sane, Jill K. Clark, David W. Lounsbury, D. Rose, Darcy A. Freedman

2021American Journal of Community Psychology16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Access to fresh and healthy food within a neighborhood has been identified as a social mechanism contributing to community health. Grounded in the understanding that challenges related to equity within a food system are both structural and systemic, our research demonstrates how systems thinking can further understandings of food system complexity. Within systems thinking, we provide an illustration of how system archetypes offer an analytic tool for examining complex community issues. We map semi-structured interview data from community stakeholders (N = 22) to the "Fixes that Fail" system archetype to illuminate systemic challenges, such as incarceration and poverty, that structure food system inequity in urban communities. Within our research, the "Fixes that Fail" archetype provided a narrative interpretive tool for unveiling complexity within the food system and interdependencies with racialized systems such as criminal justice and labor markets. This system archetype provided an accessible approach for generating narratives about systemic complexity, the production of inequity through racialized forces, and opportunities for transformation.

Topics & Concepts

ArchetypeFood systemsSociologyNarrativeInterdependenceEquity (law)PovertySocial systemSystems thinkingFood securityPolitical scienceComputer scienceSocial scienceEconomicsEconomic growthLawEcologyArtBiologyPhilosophyLiteratureAgricultureLinguisticsArtificial intelligenceFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsOrganic Food and AgricultureEconomics of Agriculture and Food Markets
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