Nutrients (Mar 2019)

South West Food Community: A Place-Based Pilot Study to Understand the Food Security System

  • Stephanie Louise Godrich,
  • Jennifer Payet,
  • Deborah Brealey,
  • Melinda Edmunds,
  • Melissa Stoneham,
  • Amanda Devine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11040738
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 738

Abstract

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The objectives of this study were to: (i) Identify initiatives supporting healthy food availability, access and utilisation in the South West region of Western Australia (WA); and (ii) understand how they were functioning as a system to enhance community-level food security (FS). This study used a novel approach; a Systemic Innovation Lab, to interview initiative leaders/stakeholders about their FS initiative. Initiative characteristics measured included those which were associated with creating the effective conditions for FS systems change. Information was uploaded to an innovative online tool, creating a ‘transition card’ (matrix) of initiatives and partnering organisations. Fifty-one participants reported on 52 initiatives. Initiatives were most likely to possess characteristics relating to reinforcing changes towards an enhanced way of working to address FS and creating disruption to the old way of working. The initiative characteristic that initiatives were least likely to possess related to identifying the different causal factors of FS, and working with other stakeholders on specific components of FS. The South West Food Community pilot project used a comprehensive yet defined approach to demonstrate the value of a place-based, co-design project. Participants and stakeholders could strengthen specific initiative characteristics to facilitate enhanced community-level FS.

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