4.2 Article

Food justice movements - Policy, planning, and networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 378-386

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0739456X04264886

Keywords

food justice movements; Toronto Food Policy Council; Foodshare; official plans; citizen planning

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This article examines the emergence of food justice movements through the lens of social movement theories, which emphasize the politics of place as a resource and strategies of networked movements operating across scales. It examines the creation of a political space for food justice from three perspectives: first, food security from below-the projects and initiatives that serve as alternative practices and precedents for policy change; second, the ways in which agencies of the local slate develop policy and change planning; and third, the emergence of food networks at local and regional scales. Food justice movements provide grounded sase studies of resistance to globalization through delinking strategies, citizen planning in relation to Toronto's official plan, and new forms of democratic practice.

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