The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas

Alternative agriculture and counter-cuisine movements have grown to a strong cultural current in Western European and North American societies. In recent years,these movements have begun to converge and coalesce around the concept of localizing agri-food relations and commodity chains as a way of re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Champion, B
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Oxford;School of Geography and Environment 2007
_version_ 1826312280720015360
author Champion, B
author_facet Champion, B
author_sort Champion, B
collection OXFORD
description Alternative agriculture and counter-cuisine movements have grown to a strong cultural current in Western European and North American societies. In recent years,these movements have begun to converge and coalesce around the concept of localizing agri-food relations and commodity chains as a way of redressing the deleterious environmental, social, and economic consequences of what are seen as dominant globalized food relations. This dissertation reports on a regional study in Eastern Kansas of the political economy of local food relations that has arisen through this producer and consumer response. It is an effort to recognize the regional interplay of disparate forces in constructing local food systems in the interest of framing more contextualized and nuanced questions about the environmental, social, and economic outcomes of alternative agri-food development. Network, conventions, and spatial analysis theories and methods were customized and put into practice in the service of these aims, using triangulation among them to mitigate each of their individual weaknesses in representing the variable embeddedness, politics, and spaces of local food in Eastern Kansas. It was found that local food generally represents a marketing niche in urban consumerism that is served primarily by regional rural producers. The distances, agricultural and food ecologies, forms of organization, and values underpinning local food linkages were all found to vary quite considerably throughout the region, creating a diverse combination of development agendas and impacts from local food networks and making food localization a highly contested concept. Local food development in its current form is thus highly dependent on urban/rural dialectics and projects of urbanization that lack open, transparent, and reflexive governance. Critical acknowledgement of these development interdependencies is important as a step toward encouraging social, economic, and environmental justice through local food development.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:25:11Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:bd5fe874-177b-40c8-8fe6-a10f3e3deb57
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:25:11Z
publishDate 2007
publisher University of Oxford;School of Geography and Environment
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:bd5fe874-177b-40c8-8fe6-a10f3e3deb572024-02-12T11:42:37ZThe political economy of "local foods" in Eastern KansasThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:bd5fe874-177b-40c8-8fe6-a10f3e3deb57EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsUniversity of Oxford;School of Geography and Environment2007Champion, BAlternative agriculture and counter-cuisine movements have grown to a strong cultural current in Western European and North American societies. In recent years,these movements have begun to converge and coalesce around the concept of localizing agri-food relations and commodity chains as a way of redressing the deleterious environmental, social, and economic consequences of what are seen as dominant globalized food relations. This dissertation reports on a regional study in Eastern Kansas of the political economy of local food relations that has arisen through this producer and consumer response. It is an effort to recognize the regional interplay of disparate forces in constructing local food systems in the interest of framing more contextualized and nuanced questions about the environmental, social, and economic outcomes of alternative agri-food development. Network, conventions, and spatial analysis theories and methods were customized and put into practice in the service of these aims, using triangulation among them to mitigate each of their individual weaknesses in representing the variable embeddedness, politics, and spaces of local food in Eastern Kansas. It was found that local food generally represents a marketing niche in urban consumerism that is served primarily by regional rural producers. The distances, agricultural and food ecologies, forms of organization, and values underpinning local food linkages were all found to vary quite considerably throughout the region, creating a diverse combination of development agendas and impacts from local food networks and making food localization a highly contested concept. Local food development in its current form is thus highly dependent on urban/rural dialectics and projects of urbanization that lack open, transparent, and reflexive governance. Critical acknowledgement of these development interdependencies is important as a step toward encouraging social, economic, and environmental justice through local food development.
spellingShingle Champion, B
The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title_full The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title_fullStr The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title_full_unstemmed The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title_short The political economy of "local foods" in Eastern Kansas
title_sort political economy of local foods in eastern kansas
work_keys_str_mv AT championb thepoliticaleconomyoflocalfoodsineasternkansas
AT championb politicaleconomyoflocalfoodsineasternkansas