Foodshed Analysis
Foodshed analysis is a spatial method for understanding where a population's food comes from, or could come from, by analogy with a watershed: just as a watershed delineates the land that drains to a river, a foodshed delineates the land area capable of feeding a given population centre. Christian Peters, Nelson Bills, Jennifer Wilkins, Gary Fick and Arthur Lembo formalised the modern, spatially explicit version in 2009, mapping potential foodsheds in New York State by matching geographically distributed agricultural production capacity to the food demand of population centres and allocating supply by proximity. The result quantifies how much of a region's food needs could be met locally — its localization capacity and self-sufficiency — and which land areas would supply which cities. Foodshed analysis has become a core tool for assessing the feasibility and sustainability of regional and local food systems.
Исходная запись
Цитирование скопировано дословно из исходной записи метода. На его основании не делается никаких выводов о проверке на уровне утверждения.
- Peters, C. J., Bills, N. L., Lembo, A. J., Wilkins, J. L., & Fick, G. W. (2009). Mapping potential foodsheds in New York State: A spatial model for evaluating the capacity to localize food production. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems, 24(1), 72-84. · DOI 10.1017/S1742170508002457
- Peters, C. J., Bills, N. L., Wilkins, J. L., & Fick, G. W. (2009). Foodshed analysis and its relevance to sustainability. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems, 24(1), 1-7. · DOI 10.1017/S1742170508002433
Курируемые утверждения
Утверждения сохранены в реестре доказательств, каждое со своей оценкой.
Этот вид не создает оценку утверждения, если в реестре ее нет.
Связанные методы
Сгенерировано из графа методов и показано как предложенные машиной связи — никаких выводов об утверждениях доказательств не делается.