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  <title><![CDATA[Graduate Student Profile - Gloria "Glo" Ross, HTS]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>Urban agriculture can provide communities with environmental 
sustainability and a reliable food source; they can also generate 
social, economic, and energy-saving benefits.</p>
<p>Ph.D. student and community-organizer Gloria “Glo” Ross researches 
the social, economic, and technological landscape of urban agriculture 
and explores models for developing community gardens. “What does it look
 like for an urban area to be environmentally sustainable using urban 
agriculture and urban gardening? And what does it look like for 
communities to actually guide that process?”</p>
<p>Ross is in her second year in the History, Technology, and Society 
(HTS) Ph.D. program. Atlanta is an ideal city for Ross to conduct her 
research. There are many existing urban garden systems that were 
built from successful models. There are production-oriented gardens, 
where residents farm on individual plots where they can grow their own 
food and harvest it for themselves. In community-supported systems, 
several members of the community put forth a collective effort to grow 
and harvest the food as products, and the contributing members divide 
the earnings. Another model is strictly educational, where the food is a
 byproduct but the purpose is to educate the members of the community 
about agricultural systems and gardening. There are many Atlanta 
communities that have potential for using these models to build 
successful urban agriculture systems, but are presented with difficult 
challenges. It is these communities that Ross has focused her energy on 
to help guide the planning process and overcome the challenges.</p>
<p>Ross is particularly inspired by the work happening in English 
Avenue, East Point, and Edgewood. These neighborhoods are close-knit 
communities, but suffer from low property values, abandoned homes, and 
crime. Ross questions, “What’s happening in communities that have 
particularly been disinvested? What are they envisioning? What do they 
see in their future to strengthen their communities and to strengthen 
their safety and their role in the economy?”</p>
<p>Urban gardens may not seem like a priority in neighborhoods facing 
social and economic challenges every day, but gardens have the potential
 to turn neighborhoods like these around. And people in these 
communities envision urban gardens. Ross spoke with a woman in English 
Avenue who expressed her desire for a community garden but was unsure of
 how to make it a reality. She asked if she could start a garden in the 
yard of the abandoned home across the street, unsure of who owned the 
property. The woman obviously wanted to improve the neighborhood, but 
didn’t know where to start.</p>
<p>Ross understands community challenges and knows how to plan and 
implement successful public projects. In New York City, she worked with 
homeless lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) youth on a project to develop a public garden space. 
Ross worked with architects, public planners, and the community to put 
the project together. In order to plan a successful urban garden in 
Atlanta, Ross knows that she will need to navigate both the political 
system and neighborhood organization and help bridge the gap between 
them. In her current research, she is examining what plans exist for 
Atlanta, what is needed by communities here, and the alignments and 
disparities between the two. She’s also exploring the process for 
merging those efforts. Ross notes that “sourcing local food” is a 
benchmark of the strategic plan for the City of Atlanta put forth by 
Mayor Kasim Reed. Atlanta also aspires to be an environmentally 
sustainable city. Ross is preparing feasibility studies incorporating 
qualitative data from the communities with the intention of presenting 
those to the Mayor’s office. Ross will participate in an initiative to 
assist Westside&nbsp;communities to develop patterns of 
sustainability&nbsp;spearheaded by Ivan Allen College Dean Jacqueline J. 
Royster and Dean Alan Balour in the College of Architecture.</p>
<p><em>Story by Lauren Langley, Master's Student, </em><em>Digital Media Program<br /></em></p>]]></body>
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      <value>2010-11-16T00:00:00-05:00</value>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Urban agriculture can provide communities with environmental 
sustainability and a reliable food source; they can also generate 
social, economic, and energy-saving benefits. Ph.D. student and 
community-organizer Gloria “Glo” Ross researches the social, economic, 
and technological landscape of urban agriculture and explores models for
 developing community gardens.</p>]]></value>
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            <title><![CDATA[Gloria "Glo" Ross]]></title>
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      <email><![CDATA[rebecca.keane@iac.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Rebecca Keane&nbsp; 404-894-1720</p>]]></value>
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