CUGE Research Fellowship Background Reading
During her 20-month fellowship term with CUGE Research, Sarah Mineko Ichioka will be studying a wide range of community gardening programmes in Singapore and their associated impacts on well-being and community cohesion, from a comparative international perspective.
CUGE Research is a branch in the Centre for Urban Greenery & Ecology and the National Parks Board of Singapore. It engages in multidisciplinary research on the greening and ecology of cities. Through its research programs, CUGE Research aims to enhance greenery planning, design and management in cities.
Community Greens: A brief comparison between the gardening schemes in Singapore and Hong Kong
Asian Urban Epicenters
The Interventionist’s Toolkit: 3
Places Journal
How do we judge the success of DIY tactics — of ephemeral works that skirt the edges of activist art and community organizing?
A Garden Grows a Community
Places Journal
Places Journal
The Urban Garden as Public Space
Places Journal
Singapore Considering Giving Community Farm the Boot
Wall Street Journal
Community gardens and sustainable urban design
Asian Urban Epicenters
Urban Agricultural Policy of Seoul
Climate and Energy Research Center, The Seoul Insitute
Presentation slide deck. American Community Garden Association Conference. Seattle / August 8-11, 2013
A Case Study on NPark's Community in Bloom Programme: Implementing Active, Responsible Citizenship in Gardening
Centre for Governance and Leadership, Civil Service College, Singapore
Confidential Document
“Community in Bloom”: local participation of community gardens in urban Singapore
Local Environment
