Student food insecurity at the University of Manitoba
2025-03-19 22:03:43 | Contributor(s): Meghan Entz, Joyce Slater, Annette Aurélie Desmarais | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.204
While rates of food insecurity among various sectors of Canadian population are well documented, food security among post-secondary students as a particularly vulnerable population has emerged in recent years as an area of research. Based on a survey of 548 students in the 2015/16 school year,...
Mapping the growing capacity of climate smart food in urban environments
2025-03-19 22:03:42 | Contributor(s): Gavin Schneider, Victoria Fast | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i2.242
The practice of urban agriculture (UA) is a unique food system model that localizes the production of sustainable, geographically appropriate food. The environmental benefits inherent in UA aligns with the emerging field of climate smart agriculture (CSA). However, the agro-industry focus of...
Invisible guests: A sound installation in a Montréal community restaurant
2025-03-19 22:03:42 | Contributor(s): Melanie Binette | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i2.220
Invité.e.s invisibles (Invisible Guests) is a sound installation created in collaboration with a community restaurant that provides affordable meals to a disadvantaged population in Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, a former industrial neighbourhood in Montréal. Recorded conversations were made...
Waste management as foodwork: A feminist food studies approach to household food waste
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Carly Fraser, Kate Parizeau | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.186
Food waste in Canada is estimated to amount to $31 billion per year, with approximately half of this waste occurring in households (Gooch & Felfel, 2014). However, household food waste studies remain underrepresented in the literature, particularly in a Canadian context. This paper calls...
An ecofeminist perspective on new food technologies
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Angela Lee | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.226
New food technologies are touted by some to be an indispensable part of the toolkit when it comes to feeding a growing population, especially when factoring in the growing appetite for animal products. To this end, technologies like genetically engineered (GE) animals and in vitro meat are...
Finding formula: Community-based organizational responses to infant formula needs due to household food insecurity
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Lesley Frank | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.230
This paper reports on qualitative research concerning community-based organizational responses to infant formula needs due to household food insecurity. It explores this topic against the backdrop of neo-liberal social welfare approaches that shape gendered food work within food insecurity...
“Sometimes I feel like I’m counting crackers”: The household foodwork of low-income mothers, and how community food initiatives can support them
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Mary Anne Martin | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.188
For women parenting on low incomes, there is a significant disparity between household foodwork standards and the resources with which to meet them. This study centres on the everyday foodwork experiences of low-income mothers and their engagement with community supports such as community food...
Faux-meat and masculinity: The gendering of food on three vegan blogs
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Dana Hart | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.233
This study explores the relationship between gender and veganism through a critical analysis of food-based discourse on three vegan blogs. As many researchers note, there is a strong association between meat and masculinity in North American society (Nath, 2011; Rothgerber, 2013; Rozin,...
Voir le jour: Breastfeeding and the commons
2025-03-19 22:03:41 | Contributor(s): Natalie Doonan | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.227
Watch Voir le jour from Natalie Doonan on Vimeo This research-creation project focuses on breastfeeding in public as an act of claiming space for the common good. Its audio-visual component, “Voir le jour,” is part of a larger work that includes community screenings and locative storytelling....
Rights for whom? Linking baby’s right to eat with economic, social, and cultural rights for women
2025-03-19 22:03:40 | Contributor(s): Christina Doonan | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.232
Breastfeeding women are primary food producers par excellence, delivering a custom-made product to fit the exact needs of a favoured clientele. The importance of breastmilk as a first food has been acknowledged in recent years by many states, which have taken measures to protect and encourage...
Old habits die hard: The need for feminist rethinking in global food and agricultural policies
2025-03-19 22:03:40 | Contributor(s): Andrea M. Collins | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i1.228
A number of global initiatives designed in recent years address global food security and aim to reduce the vulnerability of small-scale and peasant farmers in the face of expanded transnational investment in large-scale agriculture and land acquisition. While there have been efforts to...
Access and affordability of "healthy" foods in northern Manitoba? The need for Indigenous food sovereignty
2025-03-19 22:03:39 | Contributor(s): Mengistu Assefa Wendimu, Annette Aurélie Desmarais, Tabitha Robin Martens | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.302
Despite widespread concerns about household food insecurity experienced by Indigenous peoples, there is limited empirical evidence about the availability and prices of healthy foods in First Nations rural communities located in northern Manitoba, Canada. To fill this research gap, this study...
Supporting Inuit food security: A synthesis of initiatives in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, Northwest Territories
2025-03-19 22:03:39 | Contributor(s): Tiff-Annie Kenny, Sonia D Wesche, Myriam Fillion, Jullian MacLean, Hing Man Chan | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.213
Food insecurity among Indigenous Peoples of northern Canada is a significant public health issue that is exacerbated by changing social and environmental conditions. While a patchwork of programs, strategies and polices exist, the extent to which they address all “pillars” of food security...
Climate change, community capitals, and food security: Building a more sustainable food system in a northern Canadian boreal community
2025-03-19 22:03:39 | Contributor(s): Andrew Spring, Blair Carter, Alison Blay-Palmer | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.199
Canada’s North offers unique food systems perspectives. Built on close cultural and spiritual ties to the land, the food systems within many northern communities still rely on the harvesting and gathering of traditional food and function through the sharing of food throughout the community....
“Aboriginal isn't just about what was before, it's what's happening now:” Perspectives of Indigenous peoples on the foods in their contemporary diets
2025-03-19 22:03:39 | Contributor(s): Lise Luppens, Elaine Power | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.219
Health promotion materials for Indigenous peoples generally recommend that Indigenous people incorporate more “traditional” foods into their diets, referring to foods that are hunted, fished or gathered from the local environment. Little scholarly attention has focused on which foods...
Exploring homelessness and Indigenous food Systems in northern British Columbia
2025-03-19 22:03:39 | Contributor(s): Julia Russell, Margot W. Parkes | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.212
People experiencing homelessness are known to be highly food insecure, but outside of emergency aid little is known about their overall experiences with food, particularly in Canada’s northern communities. This study examined experiences that influenced access to food for people experiencing...
Responsibilities and reflections: Indigenous food, culture, and relationships
2025-03-19 22:03:38 | Contributor(s): Tabitha Robin Martens | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.216
Understanding Indigenous food systems requires positioning ourselves in our own understanding of Indigenous food, culture, and place. The resurgence of Indigenous culture occurring around food, and the protection and revitalization of Indigenous food systems must be documented with a...
Toward anti-colonial food policy in Canada? (Im)possibilities within the settler state
2025-03-19 22:03:38 | Contributor(s): Lauren Kepkiewicz, Sarah Rotz | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.202
This perspective piece teases out some of the tensions between the development of a national food policy, which has gained significant traction in Canada over the past few years, and Indigenous food sovereignty, which long predates the Canadian government and its policies and has a rich...
First foods as Indigenous food sovereignty: Country foods and breastfeeding practices in a Manitoban First Nations community
2025-03-19 22:03:38 | Contributor(s): Jaime Cidro, Tabitha Robin Martens, Lynelle Zahayko, Herenia P. Lawrence | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.249
As a concept and in practice, Indigenous food sovereignty (IFS) offers insights into the social, cultural, and environmental challenges of a deficient food system. The associated poor health outcomes of this system include infant and child health issues such as early childhood caries and...
Tackling household food insecurity: An essential goal of a national food policy
2025-03-19 22:03:37 | Contributor(s): Naomi Dachner, Valerie Tarasuk | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3.278
Eradicating household food insecurity is essential to the articulated vision of a national food policy that aims to promote healthy living and safe food for families across the country. Household food insecurity refers to the insecure or inadequate access to food due to financial constraints....
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