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This book provides critical perspectives on contemporary
collaborative consumption, a recent societal phenomenon shaking up
previously fixed socio-economic categories such as the producer and
the consumer. The contributors discuss the role of trust and
reciprocity in collaborative consumption through seven case
studies. The chapters advance debates on the contradictions of
positioning collaborative consumption as possible solutions for a
more sustainable development and exacerbating new forms of
inequalities and injustice. The book contributes a nuanced
appraisal of social and economic activity for reflecting
socio-technological changes in contemporary societies.
This book examines a diverse range of community food initiatives in
light of their everyday practices, innovations and contestations.
While community food initiatives aim to tackle issues like food
security, food waste or food poverty, it is a cause for concern for
many when they are framed as the next big "solution" to the
problems of the current industrialised food system. They have been
critiqued for being too neoliberal, elitist, localist; for not
challenging structural inequalities (e.g. racism, privilege,
exclusion, colonialism, capitalism) and for reproducing these
inequalities within their own contexts. This edited volume examines
the everyday realities of community food initiatives, focusing on
both their hopes and their troubles, their limitations and
failures, but also their best intentions, missions, and models,
alongside their capacity to create hope in difficult times. The
stories presented in this book are grounded in contemporary
theoretical debates on neoliberalism, diverse economies, food
justice, community and inclusion, and social innovation, and help
to sharpen these as conceptual tools for interrogating community
food initiatives as sites of both hope and trouble. The novelty of
this volume is its focus on the everyday doings of these
initiatives in particular places and contexts, with different
constraints and opportunities. This grounded, relational, and
place-based approach allows us to move beyond more traditional
framings in which community food initiatives are either applauded
for their potential or criticized for their limitations. It enables
researchers and practitioners to explore how community food
initiatives can realize their potential for creating alternative
food futures, and generates innovative pathways for theorising the
mutual interplay of food production and consumption. This volume
will be of great interest to students and scholars of critical food
studies, food security, public health and nutrition as well as
human geographers, sociologists and anthropologists with an
interest in food.
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