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Greater than the sum of the parts? Unpacking ethics of care within a community supported agriculture scheme

Cox, Rosie; Kneafsey, Moya; Holloway, Lewis; Dowler, Elizabeth; Venn, Laura

Authors

Rosie Cox

Moya Kneafsey

Profile image of Lewis Holloway

Professor Lewis Holloway L.Holloway@hull.ac.uk
Professor of Human Geography. Associate Dean for Research and Enterprise, Faculty of Science and Engineering

Elizabeth Dowler

Laura Venn



Contributors

Michael K. Goodman
Editor

Colin Sage
Editor

Abstract

The concept of the moral economy directs attention to the moral and ethical frameworks through which everyday decisions are framed and enacted. This chapter shows that by exposing the very real differences in the priorities and actions of EarthShare members, people can escape imaginings of local food systems as perfect or entirely free from ambiguity or conflict but still see them as sites of political potential. The chapter begins by introducing the concept of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and locating CSA within a broader literature on local food, moral economies and ethics of care. CSAs have been heralded as offering opportunities to strengthen place-based community relationships between food growers and eaters. Community Supported Agriculture has been identified specifically as a form of food production/consumption that can be characterised as caring practice. EarthShare is a not-for-profit co-operative organisation which was founded in 1994 in Forres near Inverness, Scotland. It is the longest running CSA in Britain.

Citation

Cox, R., Kneafsey, M., Holloway, L., Dowler, E., & Venn, L. (2014). Greater than the sum of the parts? Unpacking ethics of care within a community supported agriculture scheme. In M. K. Goodman, & C. Sage (Eds.), Food Transgressions: Making Sense of Contemporary Food Politics (61-81). Ashgate. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315582702

Online Publication Date Apr 22, 2016
Publication Date Jan 6, 2014
Deposit Date Apr 4, 2022
Publisher Ashgate
Pages 61-81
Series Title Critical food studies
Book Title Food Transgressions: Making Sense of Contemporary Food Politics
Chapter Number 4
ISBN 9780754679707 ; 9781138252608
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315582702
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3900186