Abstract

BackgroundUrban agriculture is a means to improve community health and reduce health inequities. It encourages civic participation in food system governance and offers citizens opportunities to explore concepts of food sovereignty within an urban setting. The objective of this study was to engage civic participation in developing an urban agriculture action plan for a Canadian prairie city. The purpose was to identify the short- and long-term goals and the barriers and facilitators to growing more food in the city.ResultsUsing a combination of Concept Systems™ concept mapping and group discussions, 66 participants contributed to developing a plan to advance urban agriculture. Six concepts form the action plan. Growing more food within public spaces in order to make urban agriculture more visible and improving education strategies are two areas that participants ranked both important and feasible. Participants relayed that increased visibility could create a cultural shift to strengthen the local food knowledge.ConclusionsSchool engagement, community development, maximizing food production in public places, and attending to regulations and bylaws are focus areas for improving urban agriculture. An integrated vision from the city administration with a paid position to make connections, oversee bylaws, and consider local food procurement systems is necessary to advance a healthy community-based food system. A systems approach to building a resilient food system and strengthening food sovereignty will require political will and a public mandate.

Highlights

  • Urban agriculture is a means to improve community health and reduce health inequities

  • Experts anticipate there will be five billion people living in urban settings by the year 2025, and are questioning our ability to meet the demand for nutritious food [1]

  • The purpose of this paper is to describe how to operationalize urban agriculture, thereby improving community health and reducing health inequities

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Summary

Introduction

Urban agriculture is a means to improve community health and reduce health inequities. It encourages civic participation in food system governance and offers citizens opportunities to explore concepts of food sovereignty within an urban setting. The objective of this study was to engage civic participation in developing an urban agriculture action plan for a Canadian prairie city. Many North American cities have obesogenic built environments that allow for access to low-quality, energydense food and little opportunity for active living [2]. This is evident in lower-income neighborhoods and results in growing health inequities [2].

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