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School Food, Equity and Social Justice provides contemporary, critical examinations of policies and practices relating to food in schools across 25 countries.
School Food, Equity and Social Justice provides contemporary, critical examinations of policies and practices relating to food in schools across 25 countries.
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Autorenporträt
Dorte Ruge, PhD, Associate Professor, UCL University College, Department of Education and Social Science, Denmark. Irene Torres, PhD, Technical Director, Fundacion Octaedro, Quito, Ecuador. Darren Powell, PhD, senior lecturer, Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Auckland.
Inhaltsangabe
1.International perspectives on school food: A matter of equity and social justiceSection 1. Food politics and policies 2. School food approaches in Peru, Colombia and Ecuador: Intentions, illusions and uncertainties 3. School foodscapes in Greenland and Denmark - critical perspectives4. There's no such thing as a free lunch: Food, schools, and philanthropy in New Zealand 5. The 'sweet bun law' and the politics of school food in Poland 6. Experiencing school food policy and practice: Learning from eleven-year-old girls in a working class community in Ireland7. The national School Food Program in the interpretation of Brazilian managersSection 2. Sustainability and development8.School meals in Norway - current status and a way forward?9.Sustainable school feeding programs: The experience in Latin America and Caribbean countries10.School food and the promotion of a more just and equitable food system in South Africa11. Avoiding the child poverty curse in Ghana and South Africa: Is school food as a social protection tool sufficient?Section 3: Teaching and learning about food 12. Japanese school lunch and food education13. Is the Indian school food environment healthy? A review, 14. Noticing and rupturing settler-colonial logics with fooding pedagogies: Thinking with children-food relations and more-than-human worlds, 15.Exploring the idea of school meals as an element of educating for viable futures 16.Our visions for school food
1.International perspectives on school food: A matter of equity and social justiceSection 1. Food politics and policies 2. School food approaches in Peru, Colombia and Ecuador: Intentions, illusions and uncertainties 3. School foodscapes in Greenland and Denmark - critical perspectives4. There's no such thing as a free lunch: Food, schools, and philanthropy in New Zealand 5. The 'sweet bun law' and the politics of school food in Poland 6. Experiencing school food policy and practice: Learning from eleven-year-old girls in a working class community in Ireland7. The national School Food Program in the interpretation of Brazilian managersSection 2. Sustainability and development8.School meals in Norway - current status and a way forward?9.Sustainable school feeding programs: The experience in Latin America and Caribbean countries10.School food and the promotion of a more just and equitable food system in South Africa11. Avoiding the child poverty curse in Ghana and South Africa: Is school food as a social protection tool sufficient?Section 3: Teaching and learning about food 12. Japanese school lunch and food education13. Is the Indian school food environment healthy? A review, 14. Noticing and rupturing settler-colonial logics with fooding pedagogies: Thinking with children-food relations and more-than-human worlds, 15.Exploring the idea of school meals as an element of educating for viable futures 16.Our visions for school food
Rezensionen
"No other collection so deeply and widely covers the international and transnational contexts of school food provision, especially not as this one does in considering the social and political work done by school meals. This book moves the field dramatically forward in understanding what we mean when we talk about social justice in school food.The contributors point out an impressively comprehensive array of dynamics that fall under the umbrella of social justice, including ecological sustainability, decolonization, hunger and food insecurity, gender bias, and so much more. This tremendous volume's cataloging of social justice aspects both underscores the importance of context in national school food provision and-perhaps more importantly-should inspire researchers to go back and make sure they haven't missed those dynamics at work in their own locales."
-Marcus Weaver-Hightower Professor, Foundations of Education, Virginia Tech
"Imagine school meals that were seen as an integral part of the school day, connected to education and all students eating together and enjoying food that is nourishing and teaches them about food, science, social studies and culture in meaningful ways. That is the vision of School Food, Equity and Social Justice: Critical Reflections and Perspectives. And this vision is beautifully accomplished by examining the construction and enactment of school food policies and politics; exploring how an equitable and just school meals program can be sustainable and how that looks different in different countries and cultures; and exploring how school meals can be seamlessly woven into teaching and learning. I hope that educators, policy makers, school food service directors, and anyone who cares about today's school students reads this book and transforms their school meals, so they are a joyful and nourishing part of each and every school day."
Pamela A. Koch, Mary Swartz Rose, Associate Professor of Nutrition Education