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Volume 31, Issue 2: April, 2004
Abstract
Mechanisms of Power Within a Community-Based Food Security
Planning Process
Christine McCullum, PhD, RD, David Pelletier, PhD, Donald
Barr, PhD, Jennifer Wilkins, PhD, RD, and Jean-Pierre Habicht,
PhD
A community food security movement has begun to address problems
of hunger and food insecurity by utilizing a community-based
approach. Although various models have been implemented, little
empirical research has assessed how power operates within
community-based food security initiatives. The purpose of
this research was to determine how power influenced participation
in decision-making, agenda setting, and the shaping of perceived
needs within a community-based food security planning process,
with particular reference to disenfranchised stakeholders.
Power influenced participation in decision-making, agenda
setting, and the shaping of perceived needs through managing
1) problem framing, 2) trust, 3) knowledge, and 4) consent.
To overcome these mechanisms of power, practitioners need
to address individual-, community-, and institutional-level
barriers to participation in community-based food security
planning processes. Practitioners and researchers can work
with disenfranchised groups to determine which agents have
the power to create desired changes by utilizing theory-based
methods and strategies that focus on changing external determinants
at multiple levels.
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