Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T13:31:13.204Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Labor and alternative food networks: challenges for farmers and consumers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2016

Analena B. Bruce*
Affiliation:
School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington IN 47405, USA
Rebecca L. Som Castellano
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho, USA
*
*Corresponding author: anabruce@indiana.edu

Abstract

Although alternative food networks (AFNs) have made strides in modeling socially just and environmentally sound agrifood system practices, the next step is to make these innovations available to more people, or to increase participation in AFNs. However, there are several barriers to expanding the impact of AFNs. The labor intensity of producing and consuming foods in AFNs is sometimes overlooked but poses a significant challenge to alternative agrifood systems’ long-term viability. This paper brings together two independently conducted empirical research studies, one focused on sustainable food production and one focused on food provisioning in the sphere of consumption. Farmers engaged in small-scale alternative food production are investing significantly more time in maintaining the health of their soils by practicing crop rotation, growing a greater diversity of crops and building organic matter with cover crops and compost. Because much of this work is unpaid, the added labor requirements pose an obstacle to the financial viability and social sustainability of alternative production methods. On the consumption side, the labor intensity of food provisioning for women engaged in AFNs, combined with other socio-demographic factors, at times, constrains AFN participation. By identifying the ways in which labor may limit the ability of AFNs to expand to a larger portion of the population, this paper helps shed light on ways of increasing the environmental, social and health benefits of AFNs.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alkon, A.H. and Agyeman, J. (eds.). 2011. Cultivating Food Justice: Race, Class and Sustainability. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Allen, P. 2004. Together at the Table; Sustainability and Sustenance in the American Agrifood System. Penn State University Press, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Allen, P. 2008. Mining for justice in the food system: Perception, practices, and possibilities. Agriculture and Human Values 37:15.Google Scholar
Allen, P. 2010. Realizing justice in local food systems. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3(2):295308.Google Scholar
Allen, P. 2016. Labor in the food system, from farm to table. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:14.Google Scholar
Altieri, M.A. 2008. Small farms as a planetary ecological asset: five key reasons why we should support the revitalisation of small farms in the global south. Penang, Malaysia: Third World Network, Environment and Development Series 7.Google Scholar
Andersen, M. L. 2011. Thinking about women: Sociological perspectives on sex and gender. Allyn and Bacon, Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Avakian, A.V. and Haber, B. 2005. From Betty Crocker to feminist food studies: Critical perspectives on women and food. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst, MA.Google Scholar
Bava, C.M., Jaeger, S.R. and Park, J. 2008. Constraints upon food provisioning practices in ‘busy'women's lives: Trade-offs which demand convenience. Appetite 50(2): 486498.Google Scholar
Bendfeldt, E.S., Walker, M., Bunn, T., Martin, L. and Barrow, M. 2011. A community-based food system: Building health, wealth, connection, and capacity as the foundation of our economic future. Virginia Cooperative Extension. http://www.bbfg.org/uploads/6/9/9/1/6991092/3306-9029-pdf.pdf Google Scholar
Biewener, C. 2016. Paid work, unpaid work, and economic viability in alternative food initiatives: Reflections from three Boston urban agriculture endeavors. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:3553.Google Scholar
Bowen, S., Elliott, S., and Brenton, J. 2014. The joy of cooking? Contexts 13:2025.Google Scholar
Bradbury, Z.I., Von Tscharner Fleming, S., and Manalo, P. (eds). 2012. Greenhorns; The Next Generation of American Farmers. 50 Dispatches from the New Farmers’ Movement. Storey Publishing, North Adams, MA.Google Scholar
Cairns, K., Johnston, J. and Baumann, S. 2010. Caring about food: Doing gender in the foodie kitchen. Gender & Society 24(5): 591615.Google Scholar
Cairns, K., Johnston, J. and MacKendrick, N. 2013. Feeding the ‘organic child’: Mothering through ethical consumption. Journal of Consumer Culture 13(2): 97118.Google Scholar
Clancy, K. 2016. The many uses of a new report on food systems assessments. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:912.Google Scholar
Click, M.A. and Ridberg, R. 2010. Saving food: Food preservation as alternative food activism. Environmental Communication 4(3): 301317.Google Scholar
Conner, D., Colasanti, K., Ross, R.B. and Smalley, S.B. 2010. Locally grown foods and farmers markets: Consumer attitudes and behaviors. Sustainability 2(3): 742756.Google Scholar
Conkin, P.K. 2008. A Revolution Down on the Farm; The Transformation of American Agriculture Since 1929. The University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.Google Scholar
Conlon, C., Timonen, V., Carney, G. and Scharf, T. 2014. Women (re) negotiating care across family generations: intersections of gender and socioeconomic status. Gender and Society 28(5): 729751.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Constance, D.H. 2008. The emancipatory question: The next step in the sociology of agrifood systems? Agriculture and Human Values 25:151155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Constance, D.H. and Choi, J.D. 2010. Overcoming the barriers to organic adoption in the United States: A look at pragmatic conventional producers in Texas. Sustainability 2:163188.Google Scholar
Counihan, C. 1999. Food, power, and female identity in contemporary Florence. In Counihan, C. (ed.). The Anthropology of Food and Body. Routledge, New York, NY. pp. 4360.Google Scholar
Cranfield, J., Henson, S., and Holliday, J. 2010. The motives, benefits, and problems of conversion to organic production. Agriculture and Human Values 27:291306.Google Scholar
Darnhofer, I., Schneeberger, W., and Freyer, B. 2005. Converting or not converting to organic farming in Austria: Farmer types and their rationale. Agriculture and Human Values 22:3952.Google Scholar
Day-Farnsworth, L., McCown, B., Miller, M., and Pfeiffer, A. 2009. Scaling Up: Meeting the Demand for Local Food. UW-Extension Ag Innovation Center, UW-Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Delind, L.B. 2010. Are local food and the local food movement taking us where we want to go? Or are we hitching our wagons to the wrong stars. Agriculture and Human Values 28:273283.Google Scholar
DeVault, M. 1991. Feeding the Family: The Social Organization of Caring Work. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
Devine, C.M., Jastran, M., Jabs, J., Wethington, E., Farell, T.J. and Bisogni, C.A. 2006. A lot of sacrifices: Work–family spillover and the food choice coping strategies of low-wage employed parents. Social Science and Medicine 63(10): 25912603.Google Scholar
Dimitri, C. and Oberholtzer, L. 2009. Marketing US organic foods: Recent trends from farms to consumers (No. 58). Darby PA: DIANE Publishing.Google Scholar
DuPuis, E.M. and Goodman, D. 2005. Should we go “home” to eat?: Toward a reflexive politics of localism. Journal of Rural Studies 21(3): 359371.Google Scholar
Ekers, M. and Levkoe, C.Z. 2016. Transformations in agricultural non-waged work: From kinship to intern and volunteer labor. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:179194.Google Scholar
Ericksen, P.J. 2008. Conceptualizing food systems for global environmental change research. Global Environmental Change 18:234245.Google Scholar
Fairweather, J.R. 1999. Understanding how farmers choose between organic and conventional production: Results from New Zealand and policy implications. Agriculture and Human Values 16:5163.Google Scholar
Farmer, J.R., Epstein, G., Watkins, S.L., and Mincey, S.K. 2014. Organic farming in West Virginia: A behavioral approach. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 4:155171.Google Scholar
Feenstra, G.W. 1997. Local food systems and sustainable communities. American Journal of Alternative Agriculture 12(1): 2836.Google Scholar
Friedmann, H. 2007. Scaling up: Bringing public institutions and food service corporations into the project for a local, sustainable food system in Ontario. Agriculture and Human Values 24:389398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galt, R.E. 2013. The moral economy is a double-edged Sword: Explaining farmers’ earnings and self-exploitation in community-supported agriculture. Economic Geography 89:341365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gomiero, T., Pimentel, D., and Paoletti, M.G. 2011. Environmental impact of different agricultural management practices: Conventional vs. organic agriculture. Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 30:95124.Google Scholar
Goodman, D. and Goodman, M. 2009. Alternative food networks. In Kitchen, R. and Thrift, N. (eds). International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Elsevier, Oxford, England. pp. 208220.Google Scholar
Gray, M. 2013. Labor and the Locavore: The Making of a Comprehensive Food Ethic. University of California Press, Berkley, California.Google Scholar
Greene, C. 2015. Organic Agriculture Overview. USDA Economic Research Service. Available at Web site http://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/natural-resources-environment/organic-agriculture.aspx Google Scholar
Greene, C., Dimitri, C., Lin, B.H., McBride, W., Oberholtzer, L., and Smith, T. 2009. Emerging Issues in the U.S. Organic Industry. EIB-55. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. Available at Web site http://www.ers.usda.gov/media/155923/eib55_1_.pdf Google Scholar
Guthman, J. 2004a. Agrarian Dreams: The Paradox of Organic Farming in California. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.Google Scholar
Guthman, J. 2004b. The trouble with ‘organic lite’ in California: A rejoinder to the ‘conventionalization’ debate. Sociologia Ruralis 44:301316.Google Scholar
Guthman, J. 2008. Bringing good food to others: Investigating the subjects of alternative food practice. Cultural Geographies 15:431447.Google Scholar
Guthman, J. 2011. ‘If They Only Knew’: The unbearable whiteness of alternative food. In Alkon, A.H. and Agyeman, J. (eds). Cultivating Food Justice: Race, Class and Sustainability. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, MA. pp. 263282.Google Scholar
Hinrichs, C.C. and Kremer, K. 2002. Social inclusion in a Midwest local food system project. Journal of Poverty 6:6590.Google Scholar
Hochschild, A.R. 1989. The Second Shift. Viking, New York. NY.Google Scholar
Holmes, S. 2013. Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies; Migrant Farmworkers in the United States. University of California Press, Berkeley, California.Google Scholar
Hupkens, C.L., Knibbe, R.A., Van Otterloo, A.H. and Drop, M.J. 1998. Class differences in the food rules mothers impose on their children: A cross-national study. Social Science and Medicine 47(9): 13311339.Google Scholar
Jacob, J. 1997. New Pioneers; The Back-to-the-Land Movement and the Search for a Sustainable Future. The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Janke, R. 2008. Farming in the Dark: A Discussion about the Future of Sustainable Agriculture. University Readers, San Diego, CA.Google Scholar
Jansen, K. 2000. Labour, livelihoods and the quality of life in organic agriculture in Europe biological. Agriculture and Horticulture 17:247278.Google Scholar
Jochimsen, M. and Knobloch, U. 1997. Making the hidden visible: The importance of caring activities and their principles for any economy. Ecological Economics 20:107112.Google Scholar
Johnston, J. and Baker, L. 2005. Eating outside the box: FoodShare's good food box and the challenge of scale. Agriculture and Human Values 22:313325.Google Scholar
Kloppenburg, Jr, J., Lezberg, S., De Master, K., Stevenson, G. and Hendrickson, J. 2000. Tasting food, tasting sustainability: Defining the attributes of an alternative food system with competent, ordinary people. Human Organization 59(2): 177186.Google Scholar
Little, J., Ilbery, B., and Watts, D. 2009. Gender, consumption and the relocalisation of food: A research agenda. Sociologia Ruralis 49:201217.Google Scholar
Lobao, L. and Meyer, K. 2001. The great agricultural transition: Crisis, change, and social consequences of twentieth century US farming. Annual Review of Sociology 27:103124.Google Scholar
MacAuley, L.E. and Niewolny, K.L. 2016. Situating on-farm apprenticeships within the alternative agrifood movement: Labor and social justice implications. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:195223.Google Scholar
Maye, D. and Kirwan, J. 2009. Alternative Food Networks. Sociology of agriculture and food entry for SOCIOPEDIA.ISA® Cheltenham: University of Gloucestershire.Google Scholar
Maye, D. and Kirwan, J. 2010. Alternative food networks. Sociology of Agriculture and Food.Google Scholar
McIntosh, W.A. and Zey, M. 1998. Women as gatekeepers of food consumption: A sociological critique. In Counihan, C. M. and Kaplan, S. L. (eds). Food and Gender: Identity and Power. Harwood Academic Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands. pp. 125144.Google Scholar
McIntyre, L. and Rondeau, K. 2011. Individual consumer food localism: A review anchored in Canadian farmwomen's reflections. Journal of Rural Studies 27:116124.Google Scholar
Moen, P. and Wethington, E. 1992. The concept of family adaptive strategies. Annual Review of Sociology 18: 233251.Google Scholar
Netting, R.McC. 1993. Smallholders, Householders; Farm Families and the Ecology of Intensive, Sustainable Agriculture. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA.Google Scholar
NSAC: National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition. 2015. Grassroots Guide to Federal Farm and Food Programs. Available at Web site http://sustainableagriculture.net/publications/grassrootsguide/ (verified 22 October 2015).Google Scholar
Pilgeram, R. 2011. The only thing that isn't sustainable…Is the Farmer”: Social sustainability and the politics of class among Pacific Northwest farmers engaged in sustainable farming. Rural Sociology 76:375393.Google Scholar
Pilgeram, R. 2013. The political and economic consequences of defining sustainable agriculture in the US. Sociology Compass 7:123134.Google Scholar
Pimentel, D., Hepperly, P., Hanson, J., Douds, D., and Seidel, R. 2005. Environmental, energetic, and economic comparisons of organic and conventional farming systems. Bioscience 55:573582.Google Scholar
Pole, A. and Gray, M. 2013. Farming alone? What's up with the “C” in community supported agriculture. Agriculture and Human Values 30(1): 85100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reissig, L., Kohler, A., and Rossier, R. 2015. Workload on organic and conventional family farms in Switzerland. Organic Agriculture 5:118.Google Scholar
Rodman, S.O., Barry, C.L., Clayton, M.L., Frattaroli, S., Neff, R.A., and Rutkow, L. 2016. Agricultural exceptionalism at the state level: Characterization of wage and hour laws for U.S. farmworkers. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 6:89110.Google Scholar
Salatin, J. 2011. Folks, this Ain't Normal; A Farmer's Advice for Happier Hens, Healthier People, and a Better World. Center Street, New York.Google Scholar
Sayer, L.C. 2005. Gender, time and inequality: Trends in women's and men's paid work, unpaid work and free time. Social Forces 84(1): 285303.Google Scholar
Schupp, J.L., Som Castellano, R.L., Sharp, J.S. and Bean, M. 2016. Exploring barriers to home gardening in Ohio households. Local Environment 21(6): 752767.Google Scholar
Som Castellano, R.L. 2013. Cooking up change? Alternative agrifood practices and the labor of food provisioning. Doctoral dissertation, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.Google Scholar
Som Castellano, R.L. 2015. Alternative food networks and food provisioning as a gendered act. Agriculture and Human Values 32:461474.Google Scholar
Som Castellano, R.L. 2016. Alternative food networks and the labor of food provisioning: A third shift? Rural Sociology 81(3):445469.Google Scholar
Tropp, D. 2010. The growing role of local food markets: Discussion. American Journal Agricultural Economics 90:13101311.Google Scholar
USDA. 2007. Commodity Payments, Farm Business Survival, and Farm Size Growth. Nigel Key and Michael J. Roberts. Economic Research Service, Report Number 51, November.Google Scholar
Van Mele, P. 2006. Zooming-in zooming-out: A novel method to scale up local innovations and sustainable technologies. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 42:131142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Women at the Edges of the New Economy (Wedge). 2008. Women, provisioning and community: Thinking holistically about women's work, a research report. 240. http://web.uvic.ca/spp/publications/documents/womenprovisioning2008.pdf Google Scholar