“…Studies over the years documenting the demographics of participants in civic agriculture reveal mixed findings. Overall, studies of CSAs (Cone & Myhre, 2000;Lass, Bevis, Hendrickson, & Ruhf 2001;Ostrom, 2008;Schnell, 2010), farmers markets (Alkon & McCullen, 2011;Byker, Shanks, Misyak, & Serrano 2012;Cvijanović et al, 2020;Wolf & Berrenson, 2003) and local food sales (Feldmann & Hamm, 2015;Godette et al, 2015;Martinez et al, 2010;O'Hara & Low, 2016;Thilmany, Bond, & Bond, 2008) show that participants tend to be white, wealthy, female, and college-educated, and are generally located in the Northeastern U.S. or West Coast near a metropolitan area. Although indicators of wealth and social class (such as proximity to a farmers market or a flexible work schedule) are often associated with greater access to local food, (Abelló, Palma, Anderson, & Waller, 2014;Galt et al, Bradley, Christensen, & Munden-Dixon, 2018;McGuirt et al, 2014;Zepeda & Nie, 2012), some scholarship posits that these demographics are not the only driver of local food consumption patterns (Guptill, Larsen, Welsh, & Kelly, 2018;Thilmany et al, 2008;Galt et al, 2017;Galt, Bradley, Christensen, & Munden-Dixon, 2019).…”