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Research and Public Policies
This page is divided into three sections:
Community Gardening -- books
and studies related to community gardening; how they operate, challenges
they face, and the history of them.
Advocacy & Research
-- articles and research studies useful for advocating for community gardens.
Public Policies -- a
compendium of public policies relating to community gardens by various
cities and other government entities
*items with specific information about community
gardens in Minnesota are denoted by
Community Gardening
A Handbook of
Community Gardening
by Boston Urban Gardeners and edited by Susan Naimark, 1982. A timeless,
beautifully written, comprehensive how-to guide for community gardening,
covering a wide range of topics. Check your used bookstore for a copy.
City Bountiful:
A Century of Community Gardening in America
Laura Lawson, 2005. A look at the long history of community gardening
within the United States. Easy to read and provides some Minnesota-specific
information as well. Available for purchase through University
of California Press 
Milwaukee
Community Gardens: Current Trends and Recommendations
2002 Report by Matthew B. Mikolajewski, graduate student at School of
Architecture & Urban Planning, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Describes the status of community gardening in Milwaukee, explores major
issues gardens face, and looks at how other organizations are addressing
similar problems.
Patchwork:
stories of gardens and community
Beret Halverson and Jim Flint, Friends of Burlington Gardens, 2005
The beautiful book shares the first-person stories of ten community gardeners
representing a diversity of cultural perspectives. The detailed accounts
gathered by Beret Halverson are accompanied by black and white photographs
taken by Jim Flint. Editor’s journal entries and practical tips
provide a "how to" guide for starting and sustaining a community,
neighborhood, or youth garden. Order from Friends
of Burlington Gardens.
Twin
Cities Community Garden Sustainability Plan 2005
Documents the challenges facing community gardens in the Twin Cities and
recommends a strategy to preserve and promote community gardens.
Advocacy & Research
A
Dietary, Social and Economic Evaluation of the Philadelphia Urban Gardening
Project
Article by Dorothy Blair, Carol C. Giesecke, and Sandra Sherman. 1991.
Found that community gardens are "an important strategy for improving
vegetable consumption, gaining control over the quality and variety of
produce consumed, and facilitating community relationships and development."
Bloom
to Grow
Why community gardens should be a part of our park system. Printed in
the P&R Magazine, a journal of the National Recreatin and Park Association
March 2006.
Community
Development Through Gardening: State and Local Policies Transforming Urban
Open Space
Article by Jane E. Schukoske, looking at the variety of public policies
that have impacted community gardens over time and across the U.S.
Leave
No Child Inside
Article by Richard Louv for Orion Magazine (March-April 2007) speaks to
the physical and mental necessity of children exploring nature.
Peak
Soil
A new take on Peak Oil - why growing food locally is so vitally important
to our longterm success. Printed in Culture Change in April 2007.
The
Food System: A Stranger to the Planning Field
An article reprinted in City Farmer from the Journal of the American Planning
Association in 2000. Notes that planners are not aware of the food system
and thus may undermine it.
Whitmire Study
Commissioned by Gateway Greening a community gardening organization in
St. Louis, Missouri. This study examined the impact of community gardens
on indicators of quality of life for years 1990 and 2000. They found a
strong correlation between community garden development and reversal of
urban decline in neighborhoods. Click to view slide
presentation.
The
Effect of Community Gardens on Neighboring Property Values
2006. Vicki Been and Ioan Voici, New York University, compared property
values of properties located near community gardens and those that were
not. They found residential properties near gardens were greater with
an increase over time. Greatest impact can be found in disadvantaged neighborhoods,
including greater economic development and increased rates of homeownership.
Making Policy: Steps Beyond the Physical Garden
2000 Issue of Community Greening Review, a publication of ACGA, is available online and has great tibits on public policy and community gardens. Well-worth a review!
Community Garden Public Policies
Community Gardens:
A Study of Public Policies in Minneapolis and Hennepin County
GardenWorks intern, Erin Foster West, completed a study of public policies pertaining to community gardening in Minneapolis and Hennepin County in May 2007. This pdf document includes information on how to find out about land ownership, and how the various policies of different government entities regarding community gardens.
Boston's
Community Garden Zoning
Read the actual language for this unique zoning code established
in 1988.
City
of Victoria (British Columbia, Canada), Community Gardens Policy
Established 2005, this policy provides a framework for how the city can
work with community associations and gardening organizations to establish
and maintain community gardens on city-owned lands, park land and privately-owned
land. These policies has been adapted by other cities in both Canada and
United States.
Community
Garden Policy of Saanich, British Columbia, Canada
The city of Saanich (108,000 people) is just north of Victoria, the capital
of British Columbia. City council passed a Community Garden Policy in
2003 (and later amended in 2006) describing the various ways that the
city will support community gardening.
New
York City & Liability Insurance
City of New York dropped liability insurance requirements for community
gardeners in March 2006. The City extended municipal liability protection
to community gardeners on city-owned land, thereby no longer requiring
garden organizations to pay for private insurance policies. Read the press
release.
Boise
Parks and Recreation Department: Community Garden Policy
Established 2002, the community garden policy provides a framework for
how community gardens will be developed on park property.
City
and County of San Francisco, Recreation and Parks Department
Responding to a strong demand among San Francisco households, the Recreation
and Parks Department established extensive community garden policies governing
the establishment and maintenance of community gardens on park property,
effective July 2006. "The intent of these policies is to continue
equal opportunity for public access to all gardens by providing a uniform
framework that will allow for flexibility in management within each garden."
City
of Seattle resolution to expand their community garden program, 2000
Resolution 30194 by the City of Seattle adopting a Five-Year Strategic
Plan as guidance for the expansion of Seattle's community gardening program
and adopting the policies and procedures necessary for the implementation
of the plan.
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