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Housing and gardening: Developing a health equity-focused research agenda

•Gardening can provide health and well-being benefits.•Little is known about how housing characteristics may influence people’s opportunities to garden.•Opportunities to garden may not be equally available to all people.•A research agenda is proposed focused on housing characteristics, socio-economi...

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Published in:Landscape and urban planning 2024-05, Vol.245, p.105014, Article 105014
Main Authors: Kingsley, Jonathan, Goodall, Zoë, Chandrabose, Manoj, Sugiyama, Takemi, Stone, Wendy, Veeroja, Piret, Hadgraft, Nyssa
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c405t-213c2005693ded04e60184fcd295b7c16fa6ea5e8cce4bb30bca0571031faac83
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container_start_page 105014
container_title Landscape and urban planning
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creator Kingsley, Jonathan
Goodall, Zoë
Chandrabose, Manoj
Sugiyama, Takemi
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description •Gardening can provide health and well-being benefits.•Little is known about how housing characteristics may influence people’s opportunities to garden.•Opportunities to garden may not be equally available to all people.•A research agenda is proposed focused on housing characteristics, socio-economic status and gardening. There is increasing evidence of the health and wellbeing benefits of gardening. However, such benefits are not shared equally across groups in the community. It is important from a social justice perspective to understand the contextual factors that influence opportunities to garden, and how they are distributed in society, how well, and to whom. Despite being a primary site in which people garden, little is known about how characteristics of housing (e.g., property rights, dwelling type) may influence gardening opportunities. Identifying housing-related barriers or enablers to gardening could suggest potential strategies to increase participation in gardening or provide gardening opportunities for those with less conducive housing situations. Building on the small body of knowledge of housing characteristics relevant to gardening opportunities and participation, we propose a new research agenda aiming to understand the relationships between housing characteristics, socio-economic status, and gardening. Through identifying ways to engage more people from diverse housing situations and socio-economic positions in the act of gardening, we hope that this new research agenda can help to promote health equity.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2024.105014
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subjects Garden
gardens
Health equity
Housing
landscapes
people
Property rights
social justice
society
Socio-economic status
socioeconomic status
socioeconomics
title Housing and gardening: Developing a health equity-focused research agenda
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