Food practices have become an important context for questions around sustainability. Within HCI, sustainable HCI and human-food-interaction have developed as a response. We argue, nevertheless, that food practices as a social activity remain relatively under-examined, and further that sustainable food practices hinge on communal activity. We present the results of action-oriented research with a grassroots movement committed to sustainable food practices at a local, communal level, thereby demonstrating the role of ICT in making food resource sharing a viable practice. We suggest that the current focus on food sharing might usefully be supplemented by attention to food resource sharing, an approach that aligns with a paradigm shift from surplus to abundance. We argue for a design that aims to encourage food resource sharing at a local level but that also has wider ramifications. These "glocal"endeavors recognize the complexity of prosumption practices and foster aspirations for "deep change"in food systems.
CITATION STYLE
Engelbutzeder, P., Randell, D., Landwehr, M., Aal, K., Stevens, G., & Wulf, V. (2023). From Surplus and Scarcity toward Abundance: Understanding the Use of ICT in Food Resource Sharing Practices. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 30(5). https://doi.org/10.1145/3589957
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