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What Is Being Sustained? Sustainability and Food Exchange Sites in Istanbul

In: Women, Urbanization and Sustainability

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  • Candan Turkkan

    (University of Massachusetts)

Abstract

This chapter focuses on the sustainability of urban food exchange sites (supermarkets, bazaars, farmers’ markets, grocery stores and alternative food networks). Taking Istanbul’s large variety of food markets and stores as its case study, the paper, first, briefly describes how sustainability is conceptualized in each type of food exchange site. These conceptualizations are then analyzed to uncover what is imagined in each site as needing to be sustained: Is it ‘the food’ (if so, what kind of food?), ‘the population’ (if so, what kind of population?), or the profit motive of capitalism? Focusing on the gendered nature of these imaginations, the paper finally interrogates the ways in which reproductive and productive labor are discursively linked in the food supply chain of today’s (global) city.

Suggested Citation

  • Candan Turkkan, 2017. "What Is Being Sustained? Sustainability and Food Exchange Sites in Istanbul," Gender, Development and Social Change, in: Anita Lacey (ed.), Women, Urbanization and Sustainability, pages 119-153, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:gdechp:978-1-349-95182-6_6
    DOI: 10.1057/978-1-349-95182-6_6
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