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Public Scholarship and Community Engagement in Building Community Food Security: The Case of the University of Kentucky
Authors:Keiko Tanaka  Patrick H Mooney
Institution:1. Department of Sociology
University of Kentucky;2. This research was supported with a grant from the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture. We would like to thank our students in SOC350: Food Security (Fall 2004), SOC517: Rural Sociology (Fall 2006, Fall 2008), and HON115: World Food Issues II (Spring 2007) for making this work possible. We also thank Deborah Webb and Shana Herron from the Kentucky Community Farm Alliance who inspired us to develop and continue this work. Christopher Blackden provided valuable GIS support to the project. The paper benefitted greatly from the thoughtful comments and criticisms of anonymous reviewers as well as the guest editors of this issue: William Friedland, Elizabeth Ransom, and Steven Wolf.
Abstract:The current call for public scholarship and community engagement by universities and disciplinary organizations has created opportunities to develop innovative ways to integrate research, instruction, and outreach. This article discusses a collaboration among scholars at the University of Kentucky and alternative agrifood movement organizations that has evolved as they pursue an alternative agrifood system in Kentucky. This collaboration made instructional programs in sociology and the honors world food issues track places in which both students and instructors can examine “problems” of the conventional agrifood system, conduct research, and develop collaborative relationships with community activists. We draw on Burawoy's discussion of public sociology and its interface with professional, critical, and policy sociologies. Supplementing our discussion with literature from social movements and science studies, we demonstrate how this integrated approach can render sociological knowledge and skills useful as critical support of alternative agrifood movements. We argue that the “experiential classroom” is an excellent site for the critical examination within the agrifood movements of oppositional culture. This, in turn, makes possible students' recognition of injustice in the existing agrifood system.
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