Chapter 1. Setting the stage: urban agriculture and public space.- PART I: Conceptual foundations: urban agriculture for human flourishing.- Chapter 2. Capabilities and beyond: towards an operationalization of eudaimonic well-being in cities.- Chapter 3. Cultivating Virtue: neo-Aristotelian concepts in public space development.- PART II: Public urban agriculture in Northern European contexts.- Chapter 4. Cultivating publicness through urban agriculture: learning from Aarhus and Rotterdam.- Chapter 5. The rise and fall of public urban gardens: four cases from in and around Copenhagen.- 6. Practicing urban agriculture in public space: experiences from Oslo.- Chapter 7. The importance of social programming in urban agriculture: a practitioner’s experiences from Norway.- PART III: When education gets in the urban agriculture mix.- Chapter 8. Key characteristics of co-produced urban agriculture visions in Oslo.- Chapter 9. Urban Agriculture from prescription to adaptation in the future dense city. A view from the classroom.- Chapter 10. Urban Agriculture and the right to the city: a practitioner’s roadmap.- PART IV: Planning for urban agriculture in Norway.- Chapter 11. Motivations for urban agriculture policies: evidence from Norway’s largest urban areas.- Chapter 12. The development and institutionalization of urban agriculture policy: what characterizes the emerging governance models in three Norwegian cities?.- PART V: A way forward for urban agriculture in cities and communities.- Chapter 13. Raising the ambition of urban agriculture in public space: nurturing urban agroecology and more-than-human health.- Chapter 14. Final reflections: Lessons learnt, limitations, and the way forward.
Beata Sirowy (Ph.D,, 2010) is a Senior Research Fellow at the Department of Urban and Regional Planning, the Norwegian University of Life Sciences and was the leader of the research project Cultivating Public Space whose findings are presented in this book. Her educational background consists of philosophy (MA) combined with architecture and urban planning (MSc), and her research interests lie at the intersection of these domains. Her PhD thesis addresses the theme of user oriented architectural practice from a phenomenological perspective. She has published on the hermeneutics of art and the built environment; ethical aspects of architecture and planning; and the role of public space in sustaining human well-being and resilience in cities. Most recently she has been exploring the opportunities for a dialogue between Western and non-Western perspectives within urban research and is currently completing a book on the relevance of Confucian concepts for contemporary urban development.
Deni Ruggeri (Ph.D., 2009) is Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Maryland, College Park, USA. His research focuses on social and psychological dimensions of landscape architecture livability in urban design, participatory design and co-creation, and green infrastructure. Prof. Ruggeri is the author of 25 journal articles and book chapters, and co-edited the book "Defining Landscape Democracy. A Path to Spatial Justice" (2019). He serves as the Executive Director of the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), for which he has been Chair of the Board of Director. From 2015 to 2018, Dr. Ruggeri has coordinated the Landscape Education for Democracy (LED) Erasmus Plus project, an educational program on the ethics, theories and practices of democratic design and planning funded by the European Union. Prof. Ruggeri has held associate professorships at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences and the University of Oregon, and has been an assistant professor at Cornell University, and has lectured at the University of California, Davis and University of California, Berkeley.
This open access book discusses urban agriculture initiatives integrated in public space of dense inner-city neighbourhoods, thereby ensuring its accessibility for large and diverse segments of urban populations. It specifically focuses on the potential impacts of urban agriculture on human well-being (both on individual and community levels), and how planning, design, policy and management practices can maximize these impacts. The book addresses urban agriculture on both a micro and macro scale to facilitate a transition to more sustainable lifestyles and enhance the quality of urban life. It also discusses ways to permanently integrate urban agriculture in existing and planned public spaces in a visually attractive, socially inclusive, and democratic manner to claim and reclaim the right to the city. Based on the research outcomes of the project “Cultivating Public Space: urban agriculture as a basis for human flourishing and sustainability transition in Norwegian cities” funded by the Research Council of Norway, the book emerges from a Norwegian context, but extends to include international urban agriculture cases from the Netherlands, Denmark, the UK and more.
By including a diversity of voices and cultural perspectives, the editors aimed to make this book engaging and relevant to an international audience of researchers, policy makers, urban designers, planners, educators, community activists, residents, and public space users of the sustainable, compact city of today and the future.