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Published on RUAF - Resource Centres on Urban Agriculture and Food Security (http://www.ruaf.org)

Land Use Planning

State of the Art Review
RUAF Publications
Urban Agriculture Magazine
Bibliographic Database

Although public awareness for farming activities in cities is slowly increasing, agriculture is still
in many cases not yet include in the urban planning. Urban planners tend to exclude agriculture from their terms of reference and as a consequence best and highly productive soils are gradually becoming built-up areas, thereby losing the potential for food production forever, (Pujol, D. & M. Beguier 2000).

However, growing urban poverty and food insecurity, high costs of green open space and solid waste management, the need for recreational opportunities in the urban and peri-urban area, tend to modify thinking of planners and authorities and a more “agricultural� approach (farmers as povery reduction strategy; farmers as waste reusers; farmers as landscape managers and providers of recreational services, etcetera). Moreover, local authorities start to recognize the role of urban agriculture for poverty alleviation and local economic development, enhancing urban food security, offering recreational services to urban citizens, etcetera.

Legalising urban agriculture and formal recognition of agriculture as a formal urban landuse and identification of which tracts of land are available for urban agriculture and what types of agriculture are suitable for such a location are important steps in the creation of a facilitating and regulating policy framework on urban agriculture replacing the existing neglecting or restricting policies.


Source URL:
http://www.ruaf.org/node/344