Contributions on sustainable food systems sought

From our friend and colleague Danny Hunter.

Farming Matters is the flagship magazine of ILEIA –- the Centre for Learning on Sustainable Agriculture. The September issue of Farming Matters will focus on local and regional food systems and how they can be strengthened to increase food security and build towards food and nutrition sovereignty. For this special issue ILEIA will collaborate with Bioversity International. ILEIA, in collaboration with Bioversity International, welcomes suggestions and contributions as articles and opinion pieces, photographs, contacts of people you think who have expertise in this area or ideas for other topics you think we should address. Contributions from all regions of the world are invited.

Queries can be directed to Jorge Chavez-Tafur (j.chavez-tafur@ileia.org), Danny Hunter (d.hunter@cgiar.org), Jessica Fanzo (j.fanzo@cgiar.org).

Oases in the food desert?

A couple of comments on our report of the USDA’s Food Desert Locator have made me revise my initial enthusiasm. People who actually live there seem to disagree that they’re in a desert. One pointed out that “the Korean market where I go grocery shopping every week is in the middle of a food desert”. Another, at greater length, explained:

I don’t know about how they define food desert – I looked at Ames Iowa and half the town is considered at “food desert”. Ames has a population of 50,000 – about half are students at ISU. We have nine grocery stores. Three of which are low price stores – such as Aldi’s. We have a public transportation system throughout the city. So how does that make a food desert. In summer we have two small farmers markets.

What can I say? We quoted part of the USDA’s brief definition of a food desert in the original post. Here’s the whole thing:

The HFFI working group defines a food desert as a low-income census tract where a substantial number or share of residents has low access to a supermarket or large grocery store:

  • To qualify as a “low-income community,” a census tract must have either: 1) a poverty rate of 20 percent or higher, OR 2) a median family income at or below 80 percent of the area’s median family income;
  • To qualify as a “low-access community,” at least 500 people and/or at least 33 percent of the census tract’s population must reside more than one mile from a supermarket or large grocery store (for rural census tracts, the distance is more than 10 miles).

Maybe our commenters would care to comment on whether those criteria fit them. Or maybe they’d like to take it up directly with Vince Breneman (Breneman@ers.usda.gov) or Michele Ver Ploeg (sverploeg@ers.usda.gov) at the USDA, and let us know how they get on.

Nibbles: GBIF, Grains, Sorghum, Carnival, ECP/GR, Rabbits, Conference, Satoyama

Food Slideshows

Two food slideshows for your delectation today.

One celebrates the orange-fleshed sweet potato and other nu-nutritional delights. Or, as Wired magazine puts it: “a visit to the laboratory of the International Potato Center in Maputo, Mozambique, where biofortification researchers are saving lives with starch”. Gabba gabba hey!

The other is from Foreign Policy magazine, which says: “The food in our mouths defines us in far more fundamental and visceral terms than the gas in our tanks or the lines on a map. So it’s not surprising that the most important questions of global politics often boil down to: What should we eat?”

Alas, time is pressing and so a detailed appreciation is currently out of the question, but both sites accept comments, and we’d be delighted if you would care to share any comments you do have here.