The Hybrid Governance of Urban Food Movements: Learning from Toronto and Brussels
In: Urban Agriculture Series
Intro -- Foreword -- A Plea for a Hybrid Governance Approach to Collective Action -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Urban Food Movements: At the Outset of a Journey -- 1.1 A Personal and Collective Journey -- 1.2 Empirical Research and Methods -- 1.3 Introducing Toronto's and Brussels' Food Movements -- 1.3.1 An Overview of the Toronto Food Movement -- 1.3.2 An Overview of the Brussels' Food Movement -- 1.3.3 The Two Food Movements and the Covid-19 Outbreak -- 1.4 Positionality, Challenges and Limits of the Research -- 1.5 Organisation of the Book -- References -- Chapter 2: Characterising Urban Food Movements -- 2.1 Problems in Food Systems -- 2.1.1 Power and Democracy -- 2.1.2 Food Security and Health -- 2.1.3 Social and Racial Justice -- 2.1.4 Ecology and Climate -- 2.2 Mobilising Alternatives -- 2.2.1 Food Sovereignty -- 2.2.2 Food Democracy -- 2.2.3 Food Justice -- 2.3 The Rise of the Contemporary Urban Food Movement -- 2.4 Reconnecting Cities with Food Production: The Land Question -- 2.5 From Food Production to the Food System Challenge -- 2.6 Mobilising Organisations and Policy Networks for Urban Food System Change -- 2.6.1 Food Policy Councils (FPCs) -- 2.6.2 Urban-Regional Food Strategies -- 2.6.3 Trans-local Food Policy Networks -- 2.7 On the Relevance of Governance -- References -- Chapter 3: Hybrid Governance and Its Tensions in Urban Food Movements -- 3.1 Characterising Hybrid Governance -- 3.2 Defining Hybrid Governance in Urban Food Movements -- 3.3 Institutions and Organisations in Urban Food Movements -- 3.4 Elucidating Three Types of Governance Tensions -- 3.4.1 Resource Governance Tensions -- 3.4.2 Organisational Governance Tensions -- 3.4.3 Institutional Governance Tensions -- 3.5 Governance Tensions and the Urban Food Debate.