TY - JOUR
T1 - Scale up urban agriculture to leverage transformative food systems change, advance social–ecological resilience and improve sustainability
AU - Qiu, Jiangxiao
AU - Zhao, Hui
AU - Chang, Ni Bin
AU - Wardropper, Chloe B.
AU - Campbell, Catherine
AU - Baggio, Jacopo A.
AU - Guan, Zhengfei
AU - Kohl, Patrice
AU - Newell, Joshua
AU - Wu, Jianguo
N1 - This study is funded by the National Science Foundation (ICER-1830036). J.Q. also acknowledges the US Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Research Capacity Fund (FLA-FTL-006277) and McIntire–Stennis (FLA-FTL-006371), and University of Florida School of Natural Resources and Environment for partial financial support of this work.
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - Scaling up urban agriculture could leverage transformative change, to build and maintain resilient and sustainable urban systems. Current understanding of drivers, processes and pathways for scaling up urban agriculture, however, remains fragmentary and largely siloed in disparate disciplines and sectors. Here we draw on multiple disciplinary domains to present an integrated conceptual framework of urban agriculture and synthesize literature to reveal its social–ecological effects across scales. We demonstrate plausible multi-phase developmental pathways, including dynamics, accelerators and feedback associated with scaling up urban agriculture. Finally, we discuss key considerations for scaling up urban agriculture, including diversity, heterogeneity, connectivity, spatial synergies and trade-offs, nonlinearity, scale and polycentricity. Our framework provides a transdisciplinary roadmap for policy, planning and collaborative engagement to scale up urban agriculture and catalyse transformative change towards more robust urban resilience and sustainability.
AB - Scaling up urban agriculture could leverage transformative change, to build and maintain resilient and sustainable urban systems. Current understanding of drivers, processes and pathways for scaling up urban agriculture, however, remains fragmentary and largely siloed in disparate disciplines and sectors. Here we draw on multiple disciplinary domains to present an integrated conceptual framework of urban agriculture and synthesize literature to reveal its social–ecological effects across scales. We demonstrate plausible multi-phase developmental pathways, including dynamics, accelerators and feedback associated with scaling up urban agriculture. Finally, we discuss key considerations for scaling up urban agriculture, including diversity, heterogeneity, connectivity, spatial synergies and trade-offs, nonlinearity, scale and polycentricity. Our framework provides a transdisciplinary roadmap for policy, planning and collaborative engagement to scale up urban agriculture and catalyse transformative change towards more robust urban resilience and sustainability.
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U2 - 10.1038/s43016-023-00902-x
DO - 10.1038/s43016-023-00902-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 38168783
AN - SCOPUS:85181216782
SN - 2662-1355
VL - 5
SP - 83
EP - 92
JO - Nature Food
JF - Nature Food
IS - 1
ER -