Study shows indigenous agriculture could play vital role in Hawai?i
Âé¶¹´«Ã½ could have sustained approximately 250,000 acres of traditional agroecosystems, potentially producing more than one million metric tons of food annually.
Âé¶¹´«Ã½ could have sustained approximately 250,000 acres of traditional agroecosystems, potentially producing more than one million metric tons of food annually.
The forum will feature presentations, interactive panel discussions, “poolside chats” and a networking reception.
UH West Oʻahu and UH Hilo are recognized for delivering higher education in sustainable agriculture at an affordable price.
A new research article, co-written by UH West Oʻahu’s Albie Miles, quantifies urban agriculture globally and examines its potential to provide a range of key ecosystem services.
The conference will highlight models of higher education that represent indigenous knowledge, engage critical political-ecological analysis and train future generations to achieve food system resilience and equity.
The ʻUlu Phenology project invites members of the community to “adopt” a local ʻulu tree and observe its lifecycle events.
UH West Oʻahu Assistant Professor Albie Miles was awarded a?USDA?grant for a food insecurity survey and?sustainable food systems?program expansion.
UH West Oʻahu will host the opening day of the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Farmers Union United 2017, providing an opportunity to showcase its sustainable community food systems program.
UH West Oʻahu Assistant Professor Albie Miles will travel to George Washington University to study U.S. federal and state level food and agriculture policy in support of sustainability, equity and human health.
The campus is striving to build a home that would be affordable to construct and would promote healthy green living and communities.