From the infrastructure of food to food as infrastructure in Brazil’s urban peripheries
Mara Nogueira, Gareth A. Jones, Aiko Ikemura Amaral
Infrastructural debates have examined how unequal, uncertain and fragmented service provision shapes the everyday lives of marginalised citizens, yet have largely overlooked the relations with food. In Brazil’s urban peripheries access to food is mediated by combinations of people as infrastructure, social infrastructures and infrastructures of care. Drawing upon fieldwork in São Paulo and Belo Horizonte, this article makes two contributions. First, it maps what food geographies termed