Sustainable Food Systems
Sustainable food systems, from seed to compost, are ecologically regenerative, provide fair livelihoods, preserve and protect biodiversity, are regionally focused and provide healthy, culturally appropriate food to everyone now and into the future. They integrate benefits across sectors and scales, and can offer multiple ways to make the world more sustainable. Urbal focuses on 5 […]
Conclusion
We would be delighted to hear how you applied the Urbal approach to evaluate the impacts of an urban food innovation, how you adapted it to your context, what difficulties and successes you encountered, and above all your results. We look forward to hearing from you!
Using Urbal results to develop meaningful indicators
Since Urbal is a participatory impact pathway mapping approach, it does not include the development of indicators. But, if you want to go further by adding on or optimizing existing indicators for your innovation assessment, Urbal results can prove very useful. Research institutes, cities, regions, national governments, international organisations, and global partnerships of experts have […]
Knowledge mobilization
Advocacy Creating awareness beyond the project with local stakeholders. Promoting the innovation for stronger support from either public policies or funders. Fostering the integration of this knowledge into urban plans. Gaining accountability fromtoward institutions and government. Communication Education. Describing how the people and the environment benefit from the effects of the innovation. Situating innovation action […]
Reflection of the results and the project as a whole
The results of Step 2 will reveal levers and brakes for your innovation as you work to achieve more sustainability. The levers can be activated/amplified while the brakes can be adjusted or removed. It is possible to organise a reflection or collective thinking moment during the Step 3 Results Sharing meeting in plenary or in […]
Sharing the results
Reporting back of the results is an important step. Sharing results can help generate additional knowledge about innovation impacts and help you make collective decisions. It is also in the spirit of participatory data gathering and making the project socially relevant. If you can’t have an in-person meeting, you can run a video conference, or […]
Share and apply your results
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwqIznDCapA The two previous steps allowed you to collect, process, analyze, and collate your data and impact pathway maps so you can extract and present your results. As part of your participatory approach, you may want to share the results with participants to wrap up the project. Step 3 can be a meeting or a […]
Other considerations
Do not underestimate the time needed to process data. It often takes longer than expected. It is important to complete the data processing phase as soon as possible after the workshop for two reasons: 1) the information is still fresh and more reliable, 2) the delay for sharing with participants will be shorter and you […]
Reading an impact pathway map
The diagram below helps you understand how to read an impact pathway map. A typical impact pathway map begins with the innovation and the related action (or activity) on the left hand side of the diagram and progresses to the right. This activity is helped or constrained by existing preconditions. The activity then creates a […]
Different ways to reorganise and display the results of the workshop
There are many ways to organize impact pathway maps, but all maps go through multiple stages of development. Below is an example of the three stages of data analysis from a workshop done in Lyon with VRAC, an association that organizes bulk buying groups in low income neighborhoods for organic/farm/fair trade agriculture and sold at […]