“You should be able to eat that meal and feel like someone cares”: community food carers, good food, and the emergence of food-aid mutualism during Covid-19

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Wylie, A. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4200-526X (2026) “You should be able to eat that meal and feel like someone cares”: community food carers, good food, and the emergence of food-aid mutualism during Covid-19. Geoforum, 170. 104553. ISSN 1872-9398 doi: 10.1016/j.geoforum.2026.104553

Abstract/Summary

Austerity policies in the UK have fostered a ‘foodbank society’ by reducing state support and normalising reliance on charitable aid and poor-quality food. As a result, individuals’ physical, emotional, and mental relationships with food are being reshaped. This paper draws upon on geographies of mutual aid and care and the visceral framework in food geographies, to examine the improvised community foodwork that emerged in Manchester during the Covid-19 pandemic. Using qualitative interviews and participatory foodwork in a local food bank, I show how community food workers reintroduced good food into emergency food provision by attending to dignity, agency and sensory pleasure rather than prioritising scarcity and functionality. At the same time, I found that these practices also supported the food workers own emotional wellbeing during the uncertainty surrounding lockdown events. Whilst this foodwork forged reciprocal affective relations, it also sits in an ambivalent political space shaped by welfare retreat, is vulnerable to neoliberal co-optation and is also over-reliant on unpaid gendered and racialised labour. I therefore conceptualise this convergence of material and affective care as food mutualism, a form of reciprocal nourishment that emerges through foodwork and both challenges and reproduces the inequalities produced by austerity. By engaging with both the political stakes of mutualism and viscerality this work provides insight into how community-based food aid might be reimagined beyond the neoliberal foodbank model in ways that centre dignity, reciprocity, and sensory pleasure.

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Item Type Article
URI https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/128442
Identification Number/DOI 10.1016/j.geoforum.2026.104553
Refereed Yes
Divisions Henley Business School > Real Estate and Planning
Publisher Elsevier
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