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An analysis of state restaurant association member's knowledge about "gleaning" in food recoveryKoukol, Barbara A. January 2000 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis--PlanB (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Gleaning potential: practicing design practice through material expression.Lloyd, Simon, sisn@optusnet.com.au January 2009 (has links)
This research project examines the potential of gleaned material fragments to inform a practice of designing artefacts for production. The project presents processes of working with material fragments in the context of newly designed artefact examples to demonstrate a capacity to explore and apply the expressive potential of material within my design practice.
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Popular attitudes towards rural customs and rights in late nineteenth and early twentieth century EnglandYoung, Tracey Elizabeth January 2009 (has links)
The central aim of this study is to explore rural attitudes concerning subsistence customary practices, such as gleaning from the harvested fields, catching wild rabbits, birds or fish; gathering wild foods; and collecting wood, furze and gorse. It focuses on the period between 1860 and 1920, when social, economic, political and cultural, changes and transformations, were taking place in rural England. It is a comparative regional study of the Cambridge Fens in Cambridgeshire, the Nene River Valley in Northamptonshire and parts of the Chilterns, mostly situated in Buckinghamshire. Tensions and conflicts concerning customary practices were often expressed through petty and social crime, and these can be viewed in the weekly petty session reports published in local and regional newspapers. These are a reliable and continuous historical source regarding the business of the local courts, which along with school log books, memoirs and diaries, provide insights into the attitudes and opinions of rural populations. The particular significance of this study is that it extends the current historiography and aids our understanding of rural conflict associated with popular culture during this period. The continuation and perpetuation of customary beliefs relied on memory, repetition, negotiation and community tenacity. But ultimately the continuation of asserting such rights, and the shape and form this took, depended on the availability of resources in each region, and individual’s and community’s changing needs and requirements.
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Negotiating purpose : Oregon's gleaning organizations and their roles in relieving hunger and povertyDrage, Kimberly T. 03 September 2003 (has links)
For over 25 years organized groups of low-income families in Oregon have
been gathering food that would otherwise go to waste and distributing this
food among organization members. The purpose of this research study is to
explore the potential for these organizations (gleaning groups) to contribute
not only to food distribution, but also to the reduction of poverty through the
development of human capital (acquiring knowledge and skills) and social
capital (building relationships of trust and support) among participants in
these organizations. Data was collected through participant observation at a
regional food distribution agency and seven gleaning group sites, as well as
interviews with 13 key informants working with gleaning organizations, and
19 volunteer members of gleaning organizations. The results of this study
indicate that gleaning groups are contributing to the development of human
and social capital by providing individuals with opportunities such as working
closely with other gleaners, carrying out the administrative tasks of a non-profit
organization and distributing food to shut-in or disabled "adoptee"
members of these groups. In addition, this study shows that there are
significant hindrances to human and social capital development within
gleaning organizations including lack of control over the amount of food
groups receive through the national food-banking network, deficiencies in
volunteer participation and an emphasis on efficiency in carrying out group
tasks. The author suggests incorporating social and human capital
development into the stated purposes of gleaning organizations in an effort to stated purposes of gleaning organizations in an effort to intentionally remove
barriers to, as well as encourage further investments in these forms of capital. / Graduation date: 2004
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Kinder and Less Just: A Critical Analysis of Modern Gleaning Organizations and Their Place in Food Recovery DiscourseGorman, Anna Clare 01 January 2019 (has links)
The practice of gleaning began as a way for the poor to provide sustenance for themselves and their families. Changes in societal ideas about private property as well as a shift toward a neoliberal style of governance have caused gleaning to become what it is today: a practice primarily undertaken by charitable organizations, nonprofits, and church groups who then donate their bounty to local food banks, providing fresh produce to the food insecure. In modern society, gleaning is often held up as a single solution to the problems of food insecurity, poor nutrition, and food waste. This thesis complicates that discourse by analyzing the websites of five different San Francisco Bay Area gleaning groups to investigate how they present themselves as fitting into the larger conversation surrounding food charity, health, and food waste. This thesis uses qualitative and quantitative textual analysis to show how the language used on each organization’s website illustrates the organization’s relationship with those three values. Each organization presents itself as fitting into contemporary food recovery discourse in a different way: one focuses primarily on community building; one is looking to expand its model as far as possible; one seeks to be a solution to poor nutrition, food insecurity, and food waste in its community; one provides myriad resources to anyone looking; and one actively embraces the food insecure. The differences among these organizations show the one-dimensionality of the current discourse surrounding gleaning as a single solution to food insecurity, poor nutrition, and food waste. While gleaning can, and does, have value, its focus on the individual’s role in solving food insecurity, poor nutrition, and food waste, as well as its inability to provide long-term solutions, complicates its role in contemporary food recovery.
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Birds, bats and arthropods in tropical agroforestry landscapes: Functional diversity, multitrophic interactions and crop yieldMaas, Bea 20 November 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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