Abstract

This article uses foodscapes as a lens to explore the potential of ecovillages’ food practices towards enhancing sustainable food systems. Ecovillages are collective projects where members attempt to integrate sustainability principles into daily community life. In these communities, food acts, not only as an element of social life, but also as a venue through which to interact with mainstream food systems and society. Yet, how food practices at ecovillages contribute to sustainable food systems remains vague. This article proposes foodscapes, as a lens, for exploring the sustainability potential of place-based food practices in ecovillages, while also directing attention to how these practices intersect with networks at broader social and spatial scales. It asks, how can we better understand and draw from sustainable food practices, when considering these as both, place-based and relational? And what is the potential and the role of ecovillage communities to contribute to broader sustainable food system change? Drawing on ethnographic and food mapping methods, the article explores selected food practices at three ecovillage communities in the United States. Using social practice theory for “zooming in” on place-based practices and “zooming out” to examine relational networks, we investigate how these communities create internally sustainable food systems, while externally bridging themselves with broader urban and rural communities. Through viewing ecovillage food practices as place-based and relational, we develop a broader and spatially-focused understanding of food system sustainability.

Highlights

  • The urgency to transition to a more sustainable food system is well acknowledged among scholars (De Schutter et al 2019; Firth et al 2011; Pudup 2008; Vivero-Pol et al 2019)

  • In this paper we focus on the role of ecovillages in their attempts of shifting in the direction of sustainable food systems

  • This paper focuses on sustainable food practices, or food practices that support a caring relationship between humans and their natural ecosystem (Hassink et al 2002)

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Summary

Introduction

The urgency to transition to a more sustainable food system is well acknowledged among scholars (De Schutter et al 2019; Firth et al 2011; Pudup 2008; Vivero-Pol et al 2019). This has been pointed to as failings in the current globalized and industrialized food system span across sectors in society (Madrigal 2017; Nestle 2002; Wingeyer et al 2017), resulting in unsustainable behavior that prioritizes efficiency and high-profit margins over care for local communities and environments (Morgan and Sonnino 2010).

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