Fagnoni, Raffaella: Be[e] the Creative Food of Social Innovation. In: Schröder, J.; Sommariva, E.; Sposito, S. (Eds.): Creative Food Cycles - Book 1, 2020. S. 149-157. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15488/10110
Abstract: | |
Three-fourths of the world’s flowering plants and about 35% of food crops depend on pollinators to reproduce: more than 3,500 species of native bees help humanity to increase farming yields. However, due to climate change and pesticides, possible extinction scenarios for these insects have been reported. How can design address this problem? What can design do for bees? A bachelor final research project (“There is no plan bee”)1 focuses on the city’s abandoned spaces and the actions of creative citizens. On the one hand, the possibility to reuse abandoned places practising sustainable solutions. On the other hand, the chance for citizens and cities to activate bottom-up design practices and social innovation, facilitating a kind of circular city. Civic participation extends to the making of new urban communities, through simple self-produced installations, aiming to cultivate new visions and to influence creative food cycles. The paper aims to new models of knowledge production, addressing social, environmental and economic issues linked with food culture. It also deals with designing for common goods as a need for our next future. | |
License of this version: | CC BY 3.0 DE |
Document Type: | BookPart |
Publishing status: | publishedVersion |
Issue Date: | 2020 |
Appears in Collections: | Creative Food Cycles |
pos. | country | downloads | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
total | perc. | |||
1 | Italy | 42 | 21.32% | |
2 | Germany | 39 | 19.80% | |
3 | United States | 33 | 16.75% | |
4 | China | 9 | 4.57% | |
5 | Taiwan | 7 | 3.55% | |
6 | Netherlands | 6 | 3.05% | |
7 | Norway | 5 | 2.54% | |
8 | Spain | 5 | 2.54% | |
9 | Australia | 5 | 2.54% | |
10 | United Kingdom | 4 | 2.03% | |
other countries | 42 | 21.32% |
Hinweis
Zur Erhebung der Downloadstatistiken kommen entsprechend dem „COUNTER Code of Practice for e-Resources“ international anerkannte Regeln und Normen zur Anwendung. COUNTER ist eine internationale Non-Profit-Organisation, in der Bibliotheksverbände, Datenbankanbieter und Verlage gemeinsam an Standards zur Erhebung, Speicherung und Verarbeitung von Nutzungsdaten elektronischer Ressourcen arbeiten, welche so Objektivität und Vergleichbarkeit gewährleisten sollen. Es werden hierbei ausschließlich Zugriffe auf die entsprechenden Volltexte ausgewertet, keine Aufrufe der Website an sich.