The Good Kitchen: A Social Hub that Creates Meaning, Inclusion and Sustainability
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Date
2025-09-24
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Abstract
This ethnographic study explores The Good Kitchen, a community-based food initiative in
Mussomeli, Sicily, and its role in fostering social inclusion, cultural exchange, and
sustainability. In a town shaped by depopulation and rigid social norms, the initiative
reimagines food assistance by combining surplus food redistribution with communal meals,
workshops, and volunteer participation. Drawing on Ray Oldenburg's concept of the "Third
Place" and Victor Turner's "Communitas," the research shows how the kitchen creates an
informal, inclusive space that bridges generational and cultural divides. Through collaboration
with local NGOs and a focus on informal learning, The Good Kitchen empowers youth,
challenges gender norms, and combats social isolation. Based on participant observation and
semi-structured interviews, the study reveals how the kitchen becomes a site of connection,
self-expression, and belonging, particularly for marginalized groups. The findings suggest that
initiatives like The Good Kitchen can contribute meaningfully to rural revitalization by
reframing food aid as a participatory and culturally embedded practice that strengthens
community resilience.
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Keywords
Social inclusion, Community, Food aid, Sustainability, NGO