Roots to Work
Footage from the Roots to work launch event
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Background
Lifetime employment within the same organisation is now
exceptional rather than the norm, and high levels of unemployment
mean that the job market is competitive. Individuals’ ability to
find and keep a job has never been more important. Yet many
individuals lack what are often called employability skills –
things that employers value, ranging from confidence and initiative
to reliability and timekeeping. A classroom is not always the best
place to learn these skills.
Project overview and
approach
CSD has conducted a review of the
evidence on how involvement in community projects which grow food
in urban areas can help people to develop employability skills and
ultimately find work. We worked with Capital Growth, which is a
partnership initiative between London Food Link, the Mayor of
London Boris Johnson, and the Big Lottery's Local Food Fund.
Capital Growth offers practical help, grants, training and support
to groups wanting to establish community food growing projects.
This new research report includes an outline of what employability
entails, and brings together evidence in the international
literature on how involvement in urban agriculture can help various
groups to develop employability. The report then presents new
findings from in-depth interviews with urban agriculture
practitioners in London regarding the extent to which urban
agriculture develops employability.
Expected impact
The project provides evidence which can be used by urban
agriculture projects to demonstrate the impact they can have on
employability. It also provides organisations that fund urban
development projects with a fuller, better substantiated picture of
the skills development benefits of urban agriculture
projects. Finally, the findings of the report may enable urban
agriculture projects to improve the way they develop employability
skills, improving the service participants receive.
Key Findings
- Community food-growing projects in London reach people in need
of employability skills, including people facing a range of
difficulties such as long-term unemployment, physical or mental
disability, addiction, homelessness and English language
barriers.
- Participation in community food-growing projects can help
develop the confidence and social support networks that underlie
employability. Community food-growing projects can develop
transferable skills that are important for working life, including
self-management, problem solving, and interpersonal skills such as
the ability to work well in a team, to support others, or to lead
others.
- Community food-growing projects can develop technical skills
which prepare individuals for jobs, they can transfer enterprise
skills, and they can encourage engagement in formal learning.
- Community food-growing projects can facilitate transitions into
work by providing references for participants, enlarging their
networks of contacts, and sometimes connecting them directly with
employers.
We want to hear from you: post a comment
Please share your tips, comments or
questions below (your email address will not be
displayed).
I appreciate very much your agriculture program because I see
that it is imperative to help others who do not have anything to
eat and I think you can the poorest countries of the earth as my
dear Haiti homeland. Could work together to help people to develop
the ability to produce their own food (courtyard garden) and other
things like a chicken or community they buy a derisory price hens
or produce vegetables, they learn how to ensure food
security.
Jean Allritch DERIS
Student in Agricultural Sciences
Responsible organization Foyer Eclosion.
Fri 19/10/2012 21:43
Find out more
For more information on this project, please contact:

Olivia
Varley-Winter
Case studies
Project dates:
February – October 2011