First Advisor

Megan Horst

Term of Graduation

Summer 2024

Date of Publication

9-4-2024

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Urban Studies (M.U.S.)

Department

Urban Studies and Planning

Language

English

Subjects

Covid-19 Pandemic, Food Security, Foodpunk, Mutual Aid, Social Constructivism, Urban Social Movements

Physical Description

1 online resource (v, 95 pages)

Abstract

Food injustice is a form of violence perpetrated by state and corporate actors against a constituency under their governing power, particularly impacting marginalized and impoverished communities. It denies individuals access to nutritious food, perpetuating cycles of poverty, inequality, physical health risks, and social exclusion. Grassroots movements have emerged to challenge dominant paradigms and advocate for food sovereignty, agroecology, and food anarchy. In Portland, the movement represents a nontraditional approach to food security that closely resembles the reactionary ideology of urban "punk" culture. Both groups prioritize community autonomy over food systems, sustainable agricultural practices, and resistance to oppressive structures that perpetuate inequality. Conforming closely with the human-urban relationship dynamics espoused by seminal urban philosophers like Henri Lefebvre and David Harvey, the Portland "Foodpunk" model demonstrates how a particular set of place and space-based urban dynamics drives an ideology to evolve into an effective set of community-empowering behaviors. The significance of this finding lies in its expansion of our current understanding of food security approaches, moving from a binary division to a spectral scale that more accurately represents the nuances and ideological variation between food security actors that have been shaped over time by their unique sets of circumstances.

By better understanding intersectional forms of oppression like food security and urban poverty more generally, the opportunities for holistic responses are greatly increased. Public policy offers key opportunities to concentrate and compound social benefits by adopting lessons from sustainable food security movements like the Portland Foodpunk movement, Food Anarchy, and Agroecology-based socioeconomic structures more broadly. These movements advocate for community-driven solutions to address food insecurity, offering alternative relational structures to resource provision that challenge traditional charity paradigms and foster resilience in the face of collective challenges. By promoting sustainable food practices, equitable access to resources, and community empowerment, these movements represent opportunities for measurable improvements across the many intersections of equitable food security, environmental sustainability, and larger-scale economic resilience. Public policies that support these movements should include incentives for local food production, funding for community-led food initiatives, and regulatory reforms to promote food sovereignty and autonomy. Embracing these approaches thus leads to healthier and more resilient communities, reduced food waste, and greater food security for all.

Rights

©2024 Nickolas Hash

In Copyright. URI: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/42644

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