Almost there: On the importance of a comprehensive entrepreneurial ecosystem for developing sustainable urban food forest enterprises

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Almost there: On the importance of a comprehensive entrepreneurial ecosystem for developing sustainable urban food forest enterprises. / Wiek, Arnim; Albrecht, Stefanie.
In: Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems, Vol. 7, No. 1, e20025, 23.02.2022.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{b19a6f7728844e8da6213bdd7330bb09,
title = "Almost there: On the importance of a comprehensive entrepreneurial ecosystem for developing sustainable urban food forest enterprises",
abstract = "Sustainable food forests offer multiple benefits to urban sustainability challenges. Research to date mostly describes structure and services of individual food forests but provides little evidence and guidance for implementation. This study analyzes and evaluates an ongoing, multiyear, transdisciplinary project developing a sustainable urban food forest enterprise in Phoenix, AZ, through a collaboration between researchers and a coalition of nonprofit organizations. Unlike other food forest projects run by nonprofit organizations, this food forest originated as a sustainable enterprise that would provide jobs and livelihood opportunities in an economically marginalized urban area while pursuing social and environmental goals such as providing healthy food and a cooler microclimate. Efforts to date have built a coalition of supporters, secured a suitable site, codeveloped a vision and an action plan, and fundraised a major start-up donation. We evaluate these outcomes against a suite of success factors derived from implementation of other food forests and explain challenges in realizing these factors through the lens of a comprehensive sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem. Data for the accompanying research was collected through direct and participant observations, review of project documents, informal conversations, a stakeholder survey, and research diary reflections. Research findings indicate that despite achieving all the success factors, at least to some extent, the underdeveloped sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem jeopardizes long-term success and multiplication efforts. These findings confirm the importance of a sufficiently developed entrepreneurial ecosystem for successful development of sustainable food enterprises. They offer guidance to food entrepreneurs, urban developers, and city officials on how to develop and support sustainable food forest enterprises.",
keywords = "Transdisciplinary studies",
author = "Arnim Wiek and Stefanie Albrecht",
note = "This research was made possible within the graduate school “Processes of Sustainability Transformation,” which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of L{\"u}neburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. Stefanie Albrecht gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). Arnim Wiek acknowledges financial support from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (TRANSFORM: Accelerating Sustainability Entrepreneurship Experiments at the Local Scale, 50658‐10029), as well as from the Belmont Forum and the Joint Programming Initiative Urban Europe (Globally and Locally‐Sustainable Food‐Water‐Energy Innovation in Urban Living Labs (GLOCULL), 730254). We would like to thank our project partners from Spaces of Opportunity, especially John Wann‐{\'A}ngeles, Amy Simpson, Darren Chapman, Bruce Babcock, and Sowan Thai for the fruitful collaboration over the past several years. We would like to thank the Sustainable Food Economy (former) lab members Dr. Nigel Forrest, Nicholas Shivka, and Hanna Layton for support in facilitating events and assisting with grant applications; Prof. Daoqin Tong, Jordan Smith, Kevin Carranza, Yueling Li, and Kelly Bitler for GIS support; Sadhbh Jouarez Bourke for facilitation support; Maud Dieminger and Kelly Baur for visual documentation of the project and the research; Jacq Davis and Pamela Mace for the field visit of their forest gardens; and V.H. Lassen Elementary School for hosting project events. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Agronomy and Crop Science Society of America.",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1002/uar2.20025",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems",
issn = "2575-1220",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Almost there: On the importance of a comprehensive entrepreneurial ecosystem for developing sustainable urban food forest enterprises

AU - Wiek, Arnim

AU - Albrecht, Stefanie

N1 - This research was made possible within the graduate school “Processes of Sustainability Transformation,” which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of Lüneburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. Stefanie Albrecht gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). Arnim Wiek acknowledges financial support from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (TRANSFORM: Accelerating Sustainability Entrepreneurship Experiments at the Local Scale, 50658‐10029), as well as from the Belmont Forum and the Joint Programming Initiative Urban Europe (Globally and Locally‐Sustainable Food‐Water‐Energy Innovation in Urban Living Labs (GLOCULL), 730254). We would like to thank our project partners from Spaces of Opportunity, especially John Wann‐Ángeles, Amy Simpson, Darren Chapman, Bruce Babcock, and Sowan Thai for the fruitful collaboration over the past several years. We would like to thank the Sustainable Food Economy (former) lab members Dr. Nigel Forrest, Nicholas Shivka, and Hanna Layton for support in facilitating events and assisting with grant applications; Prof. Daoqin Tong, Jordan Smith, Kevin Carranza, Yueling Li, and Kelly Bitler for GIS support; Sadhbh Jouarez Bourke for facilitation support; Maud Dieminger and Kelly Baur for visual documentation of the project and the research; Jacq Davis and Pamela Mace for the field visit of their forest gardens; and V.H. Lassen Elementary School for hosting project events. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Agronomy and Crop Science Society of America.

PY - 2022/2/23

Y1 - 2022/2/23

N2 - Sustainable food forests offer multiple benefits to urban sustainability challenges. Research to date mostly describes structure and services of individual food forests but provides little evidence and guidance for implementation. This study analyzes and evaluates an ongoing, multiyear, transdisciplinary project developing a sustainable urban food forest enterprise in Phoenix, AZ, through a collaboration between researchers and a coalition of nonprofit organizations. Unlike other food forest projects run by nonprofit organizations, this food forest originated as a sustainable enterprise that would provide jobs and livelihood opportunities in an economically marginalized urban area while pursuing social and environmental goals such as providing healthy food and a cooler microclimate. Efforts to date have built a coalition of supporters, secured a suitable site, codeveloped a vision and an action plan, and fundraised a major start-up donation. We evaluate these outcomes against a suite of success factors derived from implementation of other food forests and explain challenges in realizing these factors through the lens of a comprehensive sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem. Data for the accompanying research was collected through direct and participant observations, review of project documents, informal conversations, a stakeholder survey, and research diary reflections. Research findings indicate that despite achieving all the success factors, at least to some extent, the underdeveloped sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem jeopardizes long-term success and multiplication efforts. These findings confirm the importance of a sufficiently developed entrepreneurial ecosystem for successful development of sustainable food enterprises. They offer guidance to food entrepreneurs, urban developers, and city officials on how to develop and support sustainable food forest enterprises.

AB - Sustainable food forests offer multiple benefits to urban sustainability challenges. Research to date mostly describes structure and services of individual food forests but provides little evidence and guidance for implementation. This study analyzes and evaluates an ongoing, multiyear, transdisciplinary project developing a sustainable urban food forest enterprise in Phoenix, AZ, through a collaboration between researchers and a coalition of nonprofit organizations. Unlike other food forest projects run by nonprofit organizations, this food forest originated as a sustainable enterprise that would provide jobs and livelihood opportunities in an economically marginalized urban area while pursuing social and environmental goals such as providing healthy food and a cooler microclimate. Efforts to date have built a coalition of supporters, secured a suitable site, codeveloped a vision and an action plan, and fundraised a major start-up donation. We evaluate these outcomes against a suite of success factors derived from implementation of other food forests and explain challenges in realizing these factors through the lens of a comprehensive sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem. Data for the accompanying research was collected through direct and participant observations, review of project documents, informal conversations, a stakeholder survey, and research diary reflections. Research findings indicate that despite achieving all the success factors, at least to some extent, the underdeveloped sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem jeopardizes long-term success and multiplication efforts. These findings confirm the importance of a sufficiently developed entrepreneurial ecosystem for successful development of sustainable food enterprises. They offer guidance to food entrepreneurs, urban developers, and city officials on how to develop and support sustainable food forest enterprises.

KW - Transdisciplinary studies

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/48b71f64-6afe-30a4-a746-b3febe8c3f99/

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85145943662&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/uar2.20025

DO - 10.1002/uar2.20025

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 7

JO - Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems

JF - Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems

SN - 2575-1220

IS - 1

M1 - e20025

ER -

DOI

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. New evidence for vegetation development and timing of Upper Middle Pleistocene interglacials in Northern Germany and tentative correlations
  2. The influence of sustainability knowledge and attitude on sustainable intention and behaviour of Malaysian and Indonesian undergraduate students
  3. Erleichtert Öffentlichkeitsbeteiligung die Umsetzung (umwelt-)politischer Maßnahmen? Ein Modellansatz zur Erklärung der Implementationseffektivität
  4. Förderung von Diagnose- und Interventionskompetenzen mithilfe von Praxisbezügen – Konzeption eines Seminars für die erste Phase der Lehrkräfteausbildung
  5. Lesestrategien zur Unterstützung des Verstehens von Textaufgaben. Vermittlung und Routinen im Mathematikunterricht aus Sicht von Lehrkräften und Lernenden
  6. Competence models for assessing individual learning outcomes and evaluating educational processes - a priority program of the German research foundation (DFG)
  7. Use of Machine-Learning Algorithms Based on Text, Audio and Video Data in the Prediction of Anxiety and Post-Traumatic Stress in General and Clinical Populations
  8. Korngrößenabhängigkeit der Verteilung ausgesuchter schwerflüchtiger organischer Substanzen in Flusssedimenten und Schlussfolgerungen für die Sedimentanalytik
  9. Effects of Soil Properties, Temperature and Disturbance on Diversity and Functional Composition of Plant Communities Along a Steep Elevational Gradient on Tenerife
  10. Reduced nitrate leaching from an Irish cropland soil under non-inversion tillage with cover cropping greatly outweighs increased dissolved organic nitrogen leaching
  11. Berechnung von Eisengehalten und Verockerungspotential von Schluckbrunnen mithilfe von Temperatur-, Redoxpotential-, pH-Wert-, Leitfähigkeits- und Sauerstoffsättigungsdaten
  12. Stenotypy and eurytopy - Distribution models as a tool for estimating niche overlap in two spider species, Trochosa terricola and Eresus kollari (Araneae: Lycosidae/Eresidae).
  13. Die Jahrgangsmischung auf dem Prüfstand: Effekte jahrgangsübergreifenden Lernens auf Kompetenzen und sozio-emotionales Wohlbefinden von Grundschülerinnen und Grundschülern
  14. Determination of the construction and the material identity values of outside building components with the help of in-situ measuring procedures and FEM-simulation calculations
  15. The Role of Linked Social-Ecological Systems in a Mobile Agent-Based Ecosystem Service from Giant Honey Bees (Apis dorsata) in an Indigenous Community Forest in Palawan, Philippines
  16. Neanderthals in changing environments from MIS 5 to early MIS 4 in northern Central Europe – Integrating archaeological, (chrono)stratigraphic and paleoenvironmental evidence at the site of Lichtenberg