Urban agriculture ? A necessary pathway towards urban resilience and global sustainability?

被引:169
|
作者
Langemeyer, Johannes [1 ,2 ]
Madrid-Lopez, Cristina [1 ]
Beltran, Angelica Mendoza [1 ]
Mendez, Gara Villalba [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals ICTA, Barcelona, Spain
[2] Humboldt Univ, Dept Geog, Berlin, Germany
[3] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Sch Engn ETSE, Barcelona, Spain
关键词
Urban agriculture; Food resilience; Urban metabolism; Environmental externalities; Ecosystem services; FOOD; GARDENS; CITIES; URBANIZATION; IMPACTS; MODELS;
D O I
10.1016/j.landurbplan.2021.104055
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The Covid-19 pandemic newly brings food resilience in cities to our attention and the need to question the desired degree of food self-sufficiency through urban agriculture. While these questions are by no means new and periodically entering the global research focus and policy discussions during periods of crises ? the last time during the global financial crisis and resulting food price increases in 2008 ? urban and peri-urban agriculture continue to be replaced by land-uses rendering higher market values (e.g. housing, transport, leisure). The loss of priority for urban agriculture in urban land-use planning is a global trend with only a few exceptions. We argue in this essay that this development has widely taken place due to three blind spots in urban planning. First, the limited consideration of social and ecological vulnerabilities and risk-related inequalities of urban inhabitants, food shortage among them, in the face of different scenarios of global change, including climate change or pandemic events such as Covid-19. Second, the disregard of the intensified negative environmental (and related social) externalities caused by distant agricultural production, as well as lacking consideration of nutrient recycling potentials in cities (e.g. from wastewater) to replace emission intensive mineral fertilizer use. Third, the lack of accounting for the multifunctionality of urban agriculture and the multiple benefits it provides beyond the provision of food, including social benefits and insurance values, for instance the maintenance of cultural heritage and agro-biodiversity. Along these lines, we argue that existing and new knowledge about urban risks and vulnerabilities, the spatially explicit urban metabolism (e.g. energy, water, nutrients), as well as ecosystem services need to be stronger and jointly considered in land-use decision-making.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Analysis of urban agriculture sustainability in Metropolitan Jakarta (case study: urban agriculture in Duri Kosambi)
    Cahya, Darmawan Listya
    CITIES 2015: INTELLIGENT PLANNING TOWARDS SMART CITIES, 2016, 227 : 95 - 100
  • [32] Informal household-practiced urban agriculture as a contributor to sustainability and resilience: the case of Emirati neighbourhoods
    Alhaddad, Hadia
    Ahmed, Khaled Galal
    SMART AND SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2024,
  • [33] Urban agriculture: a sustainability guide for developing countries
    Pillai, Sini V.
    SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY JOURNAL, 2025, 21 (04) : 725 - 750
  • [34] Urban agriculture and the sustainability fix in Vancouver and Detroit
    Walker, Samuel
    URBAN GEOGRAPHY, 2016, 37 (02) : 163 - 182
  • [35] Biotechnology and urban agriculture: A partnership for the future sustainability
    Aggarwal, Bharti
    Rajora, Nitika
    Raturi, Gaurav
    Dhar, Hena
    Kadam, Swapnil B.
    Mundada, Pankaj S.
    Shivaraj, S. M.
    Varshney, Vishal
    Deshmukh, Rupesh
    Barvkar, Vitthal T.
    Salvi, Prafull
    Sonah, Humira
    PLANT SCIENCE, 2024, 338
  • [36] Exploring the Sustainability of Urban Leisure Agriculture in Shanghai
    Nie, Jianyun
    Kiminami, Akira
    Yagi, Hironori
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (08)
  • [37] Innovation and sustainability in urban agriculture: the path forward
    Orsini, Francesco
    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER PROTECTION AND FOOD SAFETY, 2020, 15 (03) : 203 - 204
  • [38] A Framework for Integrating Agriculture in Urban Sustainability in Australia
    Sarker, Arif H.
    Bornman, Janet E.
    Marinova, Dora
    URBAN SCIENCE, 2019, 3 (02)
  • [39] Innovation and sustainability in urban agriculture: the path forward
    Francesco Orsini
    Journal of Consumer Protection and Food Safety, 2020, 15 : 203 - 204
  • [40] Urban Sustainability and Resilience: From Theory to Practice
    Romero-Lankao, Patricia
    Gnatz, Daniel M.
    Wilhelmi, Olga
    Hayden, Mary
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2016, 8 (12)