United Nations Publication
Urban Agriculture:
Food, Jobs and Sustainable CitiesTo buy directly on-line follow this link:
Urban Agriculture:Food, Jobs & Sustainable CitiesTable of Contents
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Introduction to the series
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acronyms
Part I: The Global Significance of Urban Agriculture
- 1. Cities that feed themselves
- Myths and reality
- Basic concepts
- Urban agriculture and urban systems
- The urban nutrient cycle
- The urban food system
- Structure of urban agriculture
- Preproduction
- Production
- Postproduction
- Notes
- 2. Urban agriculture yesterday and today
- A brief history of urban agriculture
- Asia
- Africa
- Latin America
- Europe and North America
- Europe
- North America
- Summary: Comparisons across continents
- Notes
Part II: What is Urban Agriculture?
- 3. Who are the urban farmers?
- Low-income farmers
- Middle- and high-income farmers
- Domestic and international agribusinesses
- Farmers cooperatives
- Special groups of farmers
- Women farmers
- Immigrant farmers
- Crisis farmers
- Notes
- 4. Where is farming found in the city?
- Types of spaces used
- Around the house
- Community spaces
- Surplus or reserve public and private spaces
- Roadsides and other rights-of-way
- Streamsides and floodplains
- Water bodies and wetlands
- Steep slopes
- Duration of use
- Permanent use
- Long-term use
- Short-term use
- Location within the metropolitan area
- Core
- Corridors
- Wedges
- Periphery
- Access to land and tenure
- Notes
- 5. Producing food and fuel in urban areas
- Aquaculture
- Aquatic plants
- Fish and other seafood
- Horticulture
- Container horticulture
- Soilless horticulture
- Animal husbandry
- Poultry
- Small livestock
- Large livestock
- Agroforestry
- Other urban farming activity
- Fauna
- Flora
- Notes
- 6. Which organizations influence urban agriculture?
- Different roles for different organizations
- Support organizations
- Farmers associations
- Non-governmental organizations
- Governments and public authorities
- Local governments
- National governments
- Institutions
- Institutional providers
- Research institutes
- International development agencies
- Other stakeholders
- Partnerships among organizations
- Notes
Part III: Benefits, Problems and Constraints
- 7. The benefits of urban agriculture
- Health, nutrition and food security
- Social benefits
- Economic benefits
- Employment, income generation and enterprisedevelopment
- The national agriculture sector and urban food supply
- Economic use of land
- Sustainable urbanization
- Environmental enhancement
- Efficient urban management
- Waste management benefits
- Conservation of resources
- Disaster mitigation
- Productive use of hazard-prone and sensitive areas
- Mitigation of civil and economic crises
- Notes
- 8. Problems related to urban agriculture
- Health and hygiene problems
- Crop cultivation in polluted city environments
- Use of chemicals in urban farming
- Use of domestic waste in urban farming
- Rearing livestock in cities
- Environmental problems
- Other problems
- Inefficient use of resources
- Aesthetic impacts
- Notes
- 9. Constraints on urban agriculture
- Sociocultural biases and institutional constraints
- The "modern" view of cities
- "Traditional" sociocultural biases
- Institutional constraints
- Constraints on access to resources
- Irrigation
- Land and water surfaces
- Constraints on access to inputs
- Constraints on access to services
- Credit
- Other services
- Special risks of urban farming
- Postproduction constraints
- Organizational constraints
- Notes
Part IV: The Future of Urban Agriculture
- 10. Promoting urban agriculture through policy and action
- Interventions within and across sectors
- Increase public knowledge and support
- Build political will
- Improve organization and communication among farmers
- Develop a policy framework and build institutional capacity
- Expand research and training
- Improve access to resources, inputs and services
- Maximize health, nutrition and food security
- Achieve sound environmental and urban management
- Intervening at the most effective level
- Community-level actions
- City-level actions
- National-level actions
- International-level actions
- Notes
- Appendices
- A. Acknowledgements
- B. Glossary
- C. Sources for cases
- D. Countries cited in figures, cases and photos
- E. Cities and towns visited by The Urban Agriculture Network, 1991-95
- F. Selected resource people
- G. Selected readings
- H. Response form
Tables
- 2.1 Global estimates of urban agricultural activity
- 2.2 Selected data on the extent of urban agriculture
- 3.1 Presence of urban farmers in selected cities
- 3.2 Gender composition of urban farmers in selected cities
- 4.1 Extent of urban land used for agriculture in selected cities
- 4.2 Types of land used for urban agriculture in selected cities
- 4.3 Forms of land ownership and potential for farming in urban settlements
- 5.1 Farming systems common to urban areas
- 6.1 Roles of organizations that influence urban agriculture
- 6.2 Examples of NGOs active in urban agriculture
- 6.3 Examples of governmental organizations active in urban agriculture
- 6.4 Examples of universities and other institutions involved in research on urban agriculture
- 6.5 Examples of international agencies supporting urban agriculture
- 7.1 Examples of the impact of urban agriculture on health, nutrition and food security
- 7.2 Examples of the impact of urban agriculture on job and income generation
- 7.3 Cities among the world's 100 largest metropolitan areas spend 50% or more of household income by all income groups on food
- 7.4 Examples of urban agriculture's waste management benefits
- 8.1 Problems associated with urban agriculture
- 10.1 Community, city, national and international roles in promoting urban agriculture
Figures
- 1.1 Evolution of the food-growing nutrient cycle
- 1.2 Processes in the urban food supply system
- 1.3 A closed-loop urban food system
- 2.1*Historical intensive gardening outside a Chinesewalled city
- 2.2 Plan of Aachen, Germany, 1649, showing widespread farming inside and outside the city walls
- 2.3*Pre-Columbian chinampas of the valley of Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City)
- 2.4*Cultivation under cloches in the marais of Paris in the 19th century
- 4.1 Flat plain of the Niger and farmable gaps between the settled zones of Bamako
- 4.2 Areas suitable for permanent or long-term urban agriculture
- 4.3 Recycling of nutrients in a chinampa
- 4.4 Four-zone model of a city
- 4.5 Land use map of greater Beirut, 1986
- 7.1 Main contributions of urban agriculture
- 7.2 Two models of urbanization
- 8.1 Areas irrigated with wastewater and producing contaminated vegetables, Santiago, Chile, 1990
Cases
- 2.1 Urban agriculture systems in pre-Columbian America
- 2.2 The 19th-Century marais of Paris
- 2.3 Urban agriculture in Singapore
- 2.4 Urban agriculture in Indonesia
- 2.5 Urban agriculture in Tanzania
- 2.6 Urban agriculture in Peru
- 2.7 Urban agriculture in the Netherlands
- 3.1 Small-scale horticulturists in a squatter settlement in Lusaka
- 3.2 Backyard gardeners in Maipz using biointensive methods
- 3.3 Growing ornamental crops at home in Lusaka
- 3.4 Vegetable and fruit production by Del Montein Manila
- 3.5 Sewage-fed fisheries cooperatives in Calcutta
- 4.1 Growing rooftop and patio salad cactus in Mexico City
- 4.2 Community farming in a low-income neighbourhood of Kisangani
- 4.3 Cultivation at a large industrial site at Camagari
- 4.4 Growing vegetables along roadsides of Dar es Salaam
- 4.5 Cultivation in the flood plain of the Niger Riverin Bamako
- 4.6 Wastewater fisheries in China
- 4.7 Reforestation of the slopes of Mont Ngafullain Kinshasa
- 4.8 The chinampas of Mexico City
- 4.9 Cultivation under electric transmission lines in Rio de Janeiro
- 4.10 Community gardens in Barrio Matalahib, Manila
- 5.1 Wastewater purification using duckweed
- 5.2 Sewage-fed aquaculture in San Juan, Lima
- 5.3 VAC yard horticulture in Viet Nam
- 5.4 Shallow-bed gardening on inner-city rooftops in Port-au-Prince and Saint Petersburg
- 5.5 Farming without soil: women's hydroponic cooperative, Jerusalen, Bogota
- 5.6 Backyard poultry farms in Morogoro
- 5.7 Milk production in the Oyster Bay district of Dar es Salaam
- 5.8 Food and fuel production programme in Lae
- 6.1 Promotion of urban farming by the Undugu Societyin Nairobi
- 6.2 Government-planned urban farming in the Shanghai urban region
- 6.3 AVRDC's multipronged programme
- 6.4 International agencies promoting urban agriculture in Tanzania
- 7.1 Growing food for community kitchens in Lima
- 7.2 Social benefits of urban farming supported by Peru Mujerin Lima
- 7.3 Integrated urban farming in Pikine, Dakar
- 7.4 Income generation and enterprise development in Jakarta
- 7.5 Urban farming for import substitution in Sri Lanka and Ghana
- 7.6 "Productive ecological settlements' in Ajusco, Mexico City
- 7.7 Growing vegetables on garbage dumps in East Calcutta
- 7.8 Cultivating vetiver grass for environmental and disaster control
- 7.9 Greenhouse farming in response to civil war in Beirut
- 8.1 Cholera outbreak in Santiago caused by the use of raw sewage in urban agriculture
- 9.1 Influence of government policy on the development of urban agriculture in Lusaka
- 9.2 Using treated wastewater for irrigation in Tunisia
- 9.3 Producing organic fertilizer from urban waste in China
- 9.4 Pro Huerta, a national agency in Argentina that supports small-scale urban farmers
- 9.5 Cooperatives for livestock production, processing and packaging: Urban Food Foundation, Manila
- 9.6 Saturday market for urban produce in Managua
Photos
- 2.1 Raised-bed horticulture in Singapore
- 2.2 Horticulture on surplus land at a racetrack in Jakarta
- 2.3 Urban cows and cowherd in Morogoro, Tanzania
- 2.4 Community kitchen garden supported by CAREin Lima
- 3.1 Urban gardener and his family cultivate for their own consumption and the market in Lusaka
- 3.2 Husband and wife backyard gardeners in Maipz,near Santiago
- 3.3 Middle-income ornamental horticulturists at work in their front yard in Lusaka
- 3.4 Kitchen garden for a restaurant in greater Bogota
- 3.5 Medium-size poultry business in Lusaka
- 3.6 Lagoon in Calcutta farmed through a fishermen cooperative using treated sewage
- 3.7 Women selling their farm products at a street marketin Abidjan
- 3.8 "Victory garden" in front of the San Francisco civic centre during the Second World War
- 4.1 "Cactus in a box", Mexico City
- 4.2 Community garden in a churchyard in San Josi,Costa Rica
- 4.3 Maize being grown in front of a government hospital in Port-au-Prince
- 4.4 Roadside horticulture in a wealthy residential area of Nairobi
- 4.5 Intensive horticulture in a flood plain near the city centre of Dar es Salaam
- 4.6 Catfish pond in urban Taiwan (province of China)
- 4.7 Mixed cropping on steep slopes outside Nairobi
- 4.8 Chinampa aqua-terra farming system of Mexico City
- 4.9 Cultivation on airport buffer land in Manila
- 4.10 Vegetables growing in community gardening plots in Barrio Matalahib, Manila
- 5.1 Duckweed cultivation at the Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok
- 5.2 Integrated fish cultivation near Panama City
- 5.3 Community garden at the Presidio military base in San Francisco, an example of consumption-oriented horticulture
- 5.4 New onions and maize, Pikine, Dakar, an example of income-oriented horticulture
- 5.5 Container gardening in Santiago
- 5.6 Hydroponic cultivation for the market in Jerusalen, Bogota
- 5.7 "Bookcase" chicken raising in Santiago
- 5.8 Pigs raised on market waste in Ghanna, Abidjan
- 5.9 Ornamental tree nursery in the heart of Nairobi
- 5.10 Urban agroforestry with multicropping in Lae
- 5.11 Vineyards overlooking central areas of Freiburg, Germany
- 5.12 Large-scale ornamental horticulture in Port-au-Prince
- 6.1 Sign posted at a large community garden for families of Costa Rican public forces, listing cooperating public agencies and NGOs
- 6.2 Training and research centre of SEMTA, an NGO in La Paz
- 6.3 Master plan for Canton, which includes agriculture
- 6.4 Researcher at an AVRDC experimental facility in Taiwan studying small-scale aquatic home gardens
- 6.5 GTZ's horticultural demonstration site in Dodoma
- 7.1 Community kitchen in Lima that uses produce grown in community gardens to improve the nutritional quality of meals
- 7.2 Fresh meat being sold at a farmers market in Managua
- 7.3 Community gathering in Sagbe, Abidjan, for the smoking of locally caught fish
- 7.4 Training facility operated by Peru Mujer on hospital grounds in Lima
- 7.5 Small-scale ornamental horticulture production and retail at a roadside near Dakar
- 7.6 Large ornamental horticulture enterprise in Bogota
- 7.7 Drying fish in Pikine, Dakar
- 7.8 Hawkers market in Nairobi
- 7.9 Start of a reforestation campaign in Villa El Salvador,a suburb of Lima
- 7.10 Attractive, well-maintained vegetable garden, San Josi, Costa Rica
- 7.11 Sheep grazing on public land in Rome
- 7.12 Composting bin at a 75-year-old community garden in Zschortau, near Leipzig, Germany
- 7.13 Animal-powered cart bringing produce into Beijing
- 7.14 Greenhouses within the "green belt" of Beirut
- 8.1 Young farmer applying untreated sewage on leafy vegetables in Pikine, Dakar
- 8.2 Animals roaming in fields outside Asmara, Eritrea, polluting them with uncomposted feces
- 8.3 Goats grazing on park land in Oyster Bay, Dar es Salaam
- 9.1 Sewage-based experimental aquaculture pond at the Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok
- 9.2 Vermi-composting of domestic waste for use as fertilizer in Jakarta
- 9.3 Extension service specialist training a neighbourhood volunteer leader in Panama City
- 9.4 High wall protecting an orchard in Lima
- 9.5 Rice mill at a women's cooperative in Dakar
- 9.6 Packaging herbs in Abidjan
- 9.7 Home-processed salsa being sold at a market in Managua
Back to Urban Agriculture: Food, Jobs and Sustainable Cities