Contributing to Nature’s Recovery through Urban Agriculture
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15330/jpnu.5.2.45-54Keywords:
urban environment, urban agriculture, AnthropoceneAbstract
The paper analyses the legally established practice of agriculture has been forced out of
the urban environment as land value increases with higher population densities. It’s stated, that
cities and surrounding urban environments have grown dependent upon regional areas and
industrial agricultural practices to provide food for their increasing populations. Most commonly,
urban agriculture is practiced by third world nations as a first line of defence against hunger and
malnutrition or as poverty alleviation in times of economic stress. This paper argues that the
practice of urban agriculture contributes to vital environmental recovery necessary in this, the
geological age of the Anthropocene. As human activity continues to impact the functioning of earth
systems at the planetary scale, we must actively assist nature to recover rather than assume that
our existing environmental protection and conservation strategies are effective in preserving the
natural environment.