饥寒交迫中努力学习:在粮食不安全的情况下努力追求学业幸福

IF 1.6 Q2 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY
Kristin M. Osiecki, J. Barnett, Angie P. Mejia, Tessie Burley, Kara Nyhus, Kaitlyn Pickens
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引用次数: 1

摘要

大学校园的食品不安全对代表性不足的学生产生了不成比例的影响,并可能导致有害的结果。此外,新研究的范围更广,包括大学范围内的人群,如教职员工,他们也可能面临粮食不安全。高等教育粮食不安全背后的原因很复杂,其根源在于造成性别和种族差异的历史学术结构。把重点放在增加女性和少数族裔进入研究生院的人数上,导致硕士和博士学位的分配更加公平。然而,低工资、高工作量和低劣学习成绩的观念在今天仍然存在。这些因素导致只有26%的女性获得了正教授职位,只有三分之一的女性获得了外部联邦研究资金。这种反思提供了三名女教员的自我民族志描述,她们在本科和研究生的职业生涯中经历过饥饿,作为职业人士,她们间歇性地为购买营养食品而挣扎。他们还讨论了他们与学生的互动和对学生的观察,这些学生也面临着定期三餐的挑战。三位积极参与校园食品项目的本科女生从个人和同龄人的角度分享了她们的见解。基层倡议包括现场食品储藏室、乡村花园、外部资金和正在进行的研究,试图填补空白。除了短期的解决办法,重要的是继续与大学行政部门和社区领导人进行对话,制定政策和计划,以解决校园食品不安全问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Studying hard while hungry and broke: Striving for academic well-being while navigating food insecurity
Food insecurity on college campuses dispropor­tionately impacts underrepresented students and can contribute to detrimental outcomes. Further­more, new research with a broader scope includes universitywide populations such as faculty and staff who may also face food insecurity. The reasons behind higher-education food insecurity are com­plex and based in historic academic structures that create gender and race disparities. Focusing on increasing the numbers of women and minorities entering the graduate school pipeline has resulted in a more equitable distribution of master and doc­toral level degrees. However, lower wages, higher workloads, and perceptions of inferior academic performance continue in the current day. These factors contribute to only 26% of women achiev­ing full professorship and only one-third receiving external federal research funding. This reflection provides autoethnographical accounts of three female faculty members who experienced hunger during their undergraduate and graduate careers, and intermittently struggle with purchasing nutri­tious foods as working professionals. They also discuss their interactions with and observations of their students who also face challenges in securing meals on a regular basis. Three undergraduate female students who are actively involved in cam­pus food projects share their insights from a per­sonal and peer perspective. Grassroot initiatives including an onsite food pantry, a village garden, external funding, and ongoing research attempt to fill gaps. In addition to short-term fixes, it is im­portant to continue conversations with university administration and community leaders to create policies and programs to address campus food insecurity.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
73
审稿时长
15 weeks
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