Symposium: Going to Seed: Urban Agriculture in Distressed Cities, 91 UNIV. DETROIT MERCY L. REV. 173-370 (2014).

Student Article, Green Thumbs in the City: Incentivizing Urban Agriculture on Unoccupied Detroit Public School District Land, 173-204; Bouvier, Why Urban Agriculture Can Be Controversial: Exploring the Cultural Association of Urban Agriculture with Backwardness, Race, Gender, and Poverty, 205-214; Jacobs, Urban Food Corridors: Cultivating Sustainable Cities, 215-231; Owley & Lewis, From Vacant Lots to Full Pantries: Urban Agriculture Programs and the American City, 233-257; Telesetsky, Community-Based Urban Agriculture as Affirmative Environmental Justice, 259-276; Wendel, Distressed Cities and Urban Farming: Are We Making a Mountain out of a Molehill?, 277-304; Witt, Medieval Roots, Modern Fruits: Transforming Privately-Owned Abandoned Properties into Community Spaces, 305-315; Note, Cultivating Capital: A Look at the Issues affecting Urban Farms as a Business and How New Innovative Policy Changes at the Federal and State Level Will Impact the Financial Sustainability of Urban Farms, 317-343; Note, Take a Walk through the Cities’ Gardens: Comparing Detroit’s New Urban Agricultural Zoning Ordinance to Others of its Kind, 345-370.

Categories: Bibliography, Sustainable and Organic Farming