Food gardening is becoming increasingly popular, as people look for new ways to live more sustainably and minimize harm to the environment. This book addresses the 21st century trends which bring new challenges to food gardening - anthropogenic climate change, environmental degradation, natural resource scarcity, and social inequity - and explains the basic biological, ecological and social concepts needed to understand and respond to them. Examples throughout the text demonstrate how to successfully use these concepts, while supporting gardeners' values, and their goals for themselves, their communities and the world.
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Product Details
Weight: 998g
Dimensions: 189 x 246mm
Publication Date: 27 Jun 2019
Publisher: CABI Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781789240986
About Daniela SoleriDavid A. ClevelandSteven E. Smith
Daniela Soleri is an ethnoecologist whose research is on local and scientific knowledge systems in small scale agriculture and gardens and collaboration between formal scientists and gardeners and farmers. This includes research with communities around the world in quantifying farmer practices documenting risk assessment and cultural identity related to seeds and investigating new semi-formal seed systems. She teaches a class at UCSB on citizen and community science and is currently working with seed and garden activists and scientists to investigate crop diversity and adaptation in California food gardens. David A. Cleveland is a human ecologist who has done research and development project work on sustainable agrifood systems with farmers and gardeners around the world. His research and teaching have focused on sustainable small-scale agrifood systems including plant breeding and conservation of crop genetic diversity and local and scientific knowledge and collaboration between farmers and scientists. His current research and teaching focus is on food system localization and diet change to improve health mitigate anthropogenic climate change and environmental degradation and promote food and climate justice including at the University of California in California and globally. Steven E. Smith is a plant breeder botanist and statistician whose research training of students and teaching cover those areas of expertise. His research interests reflect both his training in application-oriented plant breeding and his fascination with plant survival in natural plant communities in arid environments. For example he has conducted research on conservation and evaluation of genetic diversity in alfalfa and on plant physiological responses to drought and their significance in revegetation work in the arid southwestern US. Smith also provides consulting and support to other academic researchers on experimental design and analysis. He has won a number of awards in the University of Arizona's College of Agriculture in recognition of his teaching excellence.