The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions
Adequate access to affordable, healthy food has long been a public health concern and has become a more pressing societal issue following the Great Recession and rising incidents of diet-related diseases. In response, research and government efforts have largely focused on identifying disadvantaged...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6245482017-07-01T03:00:45Z The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions Bao, Yang Bao, Yang Tong, Daoqin Plane, David Tong, Daoqin Plane, David Christopherson, Gary aggregation food access food desert independent grocers individual access spatial scale Adequate access to affordable, healthy food has long been a public health concern and has become a more pressing societal issue following the Great Recession and rising incidents of diet-related diseases. In response, research and government efforts have largely focused on identifying disadvantaged areas with poor food access and formulating policies to improve accessibility. However, the approaches that have been widely relied upon by researchers and practitioners for food access assessment are severely flawed, which may lead to inconsistent research findings or neglect of the needs of under-served/un-served neighborhoods. This dissertation identifies three important aspects of food access for improvement: the appropriate scale/neighborhoods for analysis, the use of food outlets as a proxy for affordable, healthy food; and the assessment method. In particular, three studies are conducted to: (1) examine how varying spatial scales and aggregation methods affect accessibility assessments; (2) explore the role of independent grocers, which have been neglected in previous food access studies as elements of the food landscape that may change the perception of food deserts; and (3) investigate how individual-level food access patterns compare to the widely used, area-based neighborhood measures of expected accessibility. While the dissertation discusses and addresses theoretical challenges in food access, the empirical studies conducted in the Tucson, Arizona metropolitan area contribute to a better understanding of the real-world complexity of food access. The results shed light on some predicaments identified in recent studies and have important policy implications for how best to efficiently and effectively design strategies and initiatives to enhance food-provision access. 2017 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624548 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/624548 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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aggregation food access food desert independent grocers individual access spatial scale |
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aggregation food access food desert independent grocers individual access spatial scale Bao, Yang Bao, Yang The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
description |
Adequate access to affordable, healthy food has long been a public health concern and has become a more pressing societal issue following the Great Recession and rising incidents of diet-related diseases. In response, research and government efforts have largely focused on identifying disadvantaged areas with poor food access and formulating policies to improve accessibility. However, the approaches that have been widely relied upon by researchers and practitioners for food access assessment are severely flawed, which may lead to inconsistent research findings or neglect of the needs of under-served/un-served neighborhoods. This dissertation identifies three important aspects of food access for improvement: the appropriate scale/neighborhoods for analysis, the use of food outlets as a proxy for affordable, healthy food; and the assessment method. In particular, three studies are conducted to: (1) examine how varying spatial scales and aggregation methods affect accessibility assessments; (2) explore the role of independent grocers, which have been neglected in previous food access studies as elements of the food landscape that may change the perception of food deserts; and (3) investigate how individual-level food access patterns compare to the widely used, area-based neighborhood measures of expected accessibility. While the dissertation discusses and addresses theoretical challenges in food access, the empirical studies conducted in the Tucson, Arizona metropolitan area contribute to a better understanding of the real-world complexity of food access. The results shed light on some predicaments identified in recent studies and have important policy implications for how best to efficiently and effectively design strategies and initiatives to enhance food-provision access. |
author2 |
Tong, Daoqin |
author_facet |
Tong, Daoqin Bao, Yang Bao, Yang |
author |
Bao, Yang Bao, Yang |
author_sort |
Bao, Yang |
title |
The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
title_short |
The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
title_full |
The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
title_fullStr |
The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Geography of Urban Food Access: Exploring the Spatial and Socioeconomic Dimensions |
title_sort |
geography of urban food access: exploring the spatial and socioeconomic dimensions |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624548 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/624548 |
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