Abstract

While the food justice movement was initially asso¬ciated with increasing availability of fresh produce in low-income communities of color through insti¬tutions such as farmers markets, scholars have cri¬tiqued this as imposing a right way of eating. Food justice scholarship has moved away from a focus on healthy eating toward a focus on community economic development, as food enterprises can stimulate job creation. This paper investigates the dual goals of the food justice movement through a case study in San Diego. While food justice has moved beyond promoting a love of produce and is increasingly oriented toward good jobs, for the urban gardeners in this study, the movement is still a lot about vegetables. They see food as medicine, and note the health benefits of moving toward a plant-based diet. Yet, they are reluctant to push this way of eating on others, as they do not want to come across as elitist. Instead, they spread aware¬ness that plant-based diets are an African tradition that should not just be associated with rich white folks. Rather than leading with nutrition, they lead with tradition, taste, and buying Black. To encour¬age consumption of vegetables, they aim to in¬crease the supply of prepared food options in the community, and to market dishes as delicious rather than healthy, all the while supporting Black food entrepreneurs. When selling produce direct to the consumer through farmers markets does not achieve their vision of promoting health or sup¬porting livelihoods, they re-imagine a strategy of promoting food justice through a neighborhood food supply chain.

Highlights

  • Introduction and Literature ReviewAs a scholarly concept, food justice intends to shed light on the racial injustices that mark our currentVolume 10, Issue 2 / Winter 2020–2021model of food production, distribution, and consumption

  • This paper addresses the tension between the health and community development goals of the food justice movement by exploring how urban community gardeners reconcile contradictory logics

  • This paper explores the perspectives of Black gardeners and food justice advocates in Southeastern San Diego (SESD)

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction and Literature ReviewAs a scholarly concept, food justice intends to shed light on the racial injustices that mark our currentVolume 10, Issue 2 / Winter 2020–2021model of food production, distribution, and consumption. It aims to bring attention to how the food system has been shaped by institutional racism—from unequal distribution of land, to lack of labor protections, to supermarket redlining. After critiques that food justice focused too much on urban landscapes, leaving out farm labor (Minkoff-Zern, 2014), recent scholarship has incorporated grocery retail and restaurant workers into the movement (Myers & Sbicca, 2015; Sbicca, 2015, 2017; Sbicca & Myers, 2017). Food justice is concerned with worker justice as well as equitable access to nutritious and culturally appropriate foods among communities of color, including Native American food deserts as well as inner city food apartheid (Smith, 2019). Racist policies designed these urban landscapes, and to counteract them food justice organizations have developed community gardens and farmers markets to bring more fresh produce into otherwise barren areas to improve the local foodscape

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