Skip to main content
Article
Food Deserts and Real Estate-Led Social Policy
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (2017)
  • Laura Wolf-Powers
Abstract
Since the early 2000s in the United States, food deserts––neighborhoods in which  households have limited geographic access to full-service supermarkets or grocery stores–– have become conceptually central in public policy research on food security. Analyzing this phenomenon from a ‘policy mobility’ perspective, this article traces the food desert’s emergence in policy discourse, locating it within an entrepreneurial social policy paradigm that privileges real estate development over direct economic relief. In the context of property-led anti-poverty efforts, the identification and mapping of food deserts cata lyzes a logic that leads to subsidy to grocery store development in low-income areas (or ‘fresh  food financing’), while at the same time officials are cutting programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps), which directly supplements household food budgets. The article contributes to widening critical discussion of the food desert paradigm and the policy interventions with which it is associated. It calls on urban researchers and practitioners to reframe discussions of food access and nutrition around the shortage of basic income and a need for higher wage floors.

Keywords
  • food deserts,
  • property-led economic development,
  • food insecurity,
  • Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP),
  • Policy mobility
Publication Date
Fall 2017
DOI
DOI:10.1111/1468-2427.12515
Citation Information
Laura Wolf-Powers. "Food Deserts and Real Estate-Led Social Policy" International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/laura_wolf_powers/42/