“…Additionally, on the heels of a growing alternative food movement, the model for such youth empowerment is increasingly deployed through urban gardening programs (Pudup, 2008;Knigge, 2009). 1 Unlike international development programs that approach empowerment through individualistic, economic means (Fernando, 1997;Nagar and Raju, 2003;Miraftab, 2004), youth empowerment organizations often approach impoverishment from a relational perspective. They recognize that young people are marginalized across multiple social and economic factors: age, race, class, gender, ability, language spoken, mobility, education, etc.…”