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Gardening for Food Well-Being in the COVID-19 Era

Esteve Gaelle Giraud, Sara El-Sayed, Adenike Opejin

2021Sustainability21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

“Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness”, is what millions of Americans strive for. The onset of COVID-19 has highlighted the disparities that exist among Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities, which are facing food access inequities. In this paper, we argue that engaging in growing food sustainably can improve food access, support food justice and enhance sense of purpose and well-being. We expand the notion of Food Well-Being (FWB) to include food producers—especially gardeners—and hypothesize that gardening has the potential to enhance FWB, regardless of the racial and socio-economic background. However, without policies tackling social and racial justice issues, structural barriers may hinder this potential. We use three studies to draw a rich profile of sustainable food gardeners in Arizona, USA and their well-being: (a) the children and teachers engaged in school gardens in the Phoenix metropolitan area; (b) sustainable gardeners and farmers in Phoenix and Tucson; (c) Arizona gardeners during the pandemic. The results show a connection between sustainable gardening and eudemonic well-being, and an impact on the five FWB dimensions (physical, intellectual, spiritual, emotional and social). However, without appropriate policies, funding and infrastructure, the impact might remain minimal, volatile and subject to tokenism.

Topics & Concepts

PhoenixSustainabilityIndigenousFood systemsMetropolitan areaFood securityEconomic JusticeEnvironmental justiceHappinessEconomic growthPolitical scienceSociologyGeographyAgricultureEconomicsEcologyLawArchaeologyBiologyUrban Agriculture and SustainabilityUrban Green Space and HealthOrganic Food and Agriculture
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