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Feeding the City: the urban food movement Feeding Bristol in the Future Conference, The Council House, Bristol 10 March 2010 Kevin Morgan School of City.

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Presentation on theme: "Feeding the City: the urban food movement Feeding Bristol in the Future Conference, The Council House, Bristol 10 March 2010 Kevin Morgan School of City."— Presentation transcript:

1 Feeding the City: the urban food movement Feeding Bristol in the Future Conference, The Council House, Bristol 10 March 2010 Kevin Morgan School of City and Regional Planning Cardiff University

2 The forgotten planning domain Among basic essentials for life – air, water, shelter, food – the latter has been absent from the planning agenda (APA) The food system has been “a stranger to the planning field” (Pothukuchi and Kaufman, 2000) Possible reasons:  Food is a rural not an urban issue – but what about urban agriculture?  Food is invisible because it’s plentiful – but what about nutritious food and under-served areas?  Food is just “too big to see” – Caroline Steel in Hungry City

3 Food becomes visible Food has moved up the political agenda for many reasons:  looming crises of climate change  food chain accounts for 31% of GHG emissions in the EU  burgeoning problems of obesity/hunger  food system makes huge demands on land, water, energy and transport  food price hikes in 2008 triggered urban riots  food security is now deemed a national security issue  G20 convenes its first ever meeting on agriculture

4 Food 2030 Food 2030, the new UK strategy, is a curate’s egg Good bits  First government-wide food strategy since 1945  Put security and sustainability on the political agenda Bad bits  Too much emphasis on voluntarism  Too much emphasis on consumers  Did little to address the powerful actors in the food chain  FSA now backtracking on traffic light food labelling

5 The uniqueness of food Food is unlike any other sector – we ingest it The multifunctional character of food means it connects with many activities that are central to urban planning  Human health & wellbeing  Environmental integrity  Transport  Energy  Water  Land use  Urban regeneration/local economic development  Cultural identity/place marketing

6 The rise of urban food planning Urban food planning comes of age  London/Amsterdam  New York/San Francisco/Toronto  Kampala/ Dar es Salaam Who are the food planners?  All professionals and campaigners who strive to create a sustainable food system  Biggest problem – too localised/fragmented to be scaled up and replicated because of “projectitis”

7 Unpicking the urban foodscape The urban foodscape has many facets: Public plates  where low cost masquerades as best value Food service  where transparency is absent Supermarkets  where localisation should be a planning requirement Public spaces  for farmers’ markets and healthy food zones around schools

8 Green cities/connected cities Urban food planning is about making connections at three fundamental levels Connected city governance – the internal conversation  from departmental silos to wellbeing networks Connected city governance – the external conversation  tapping the creativity of civil society/food policy councils Connected city-regions  reconnecting the city with its rural hinterland on economic, ecological and cultural grounds  cities creating markets for their regions  regions feeding their cities

9 Further information The Urban Foodscape: World Cities and the New Food Equation (K. Morgan and R. Sonnino, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 2010) Local and Green, Global and Fair: The Ethical Foodscape and the Politics of Care (K. Morgan, Environment & Planning A, 2010) Feeding the City: The Challenge of Urban Food Planning (K. Morgan, International Planning Studies, 2010) The School Food Revolution: Public Food and the Challenge of Sustainable Development, K. Morgan and R. Sonnino, Earthscan, 2008)


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