1st Edition

Revaluing Horticultural Skills The Knowledge and Labour of Growing Food

By Hannah Pitt Copyright 2025
240 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

240 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

240 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book highlights the value and skill of horticultural work through stories of food cultivation. It examines the difficulties that arise from the perception that this type of activity is unskilled and the importance of acknowledging the expertise involved in growing food. The book provides a rare focus on horticulture as a vital part of agri-food systems, offering a social science... Read more

Chapter 1 Introduction: The value of horticultural work 

Chapter 2 Global horticulture: Growing cheap food and precarious work 

Chapter 3 The roots of "unskilled" work in UK horticulture  

Chapter 4 Who picks for Britain?

Chapter 5 Knowing good growing

Chapter 6 Becoming a good grower 

Chapter 7 The health of horticulture’s skills ecosystems  

Chapter 8 Conclusion: Revaluing horticultural work and workers together

References

Biography

Hannah Pitt is Senior Lecturer in Environmental Geography at Cardiff University’s School of Geography and Planning, where she specialises in researching and teaching food system sustainability, with a focus on human-plant relations.

Those bright red strawberries or unblemished tomatoes do not just fall from the plant into their packing materials. It takes the exquisite attention and detailed care of the millions of harvest workers, underpaid and overworked, often migrants, to put our cherished fruits and vegetables on the table. Finally, we have a book that thoroughly and lucidly explores why such important work has been coded as de-skilled and how it could and should be otherwise.

- Julie Guthman, author of Wilted: Pathogens, Chemicals, and the Fragile Future of the Strawberry Industry.

 

This book is so welcome. It gives horticulture and its skills due respect for feeding people and for what they are – a remarkable array of knowledge without which urban consumers would be entirely instead of only partially in hock to mostly big food processors. Horticulture is a bulwark between public health and food serfdom. Hannah Pitt’s understanding of exactly what skills are entailed is both fine scholarship and a cultural appeal for dignity. Peeling back myths that growing food is unskilled and of low value, she poses deep challenges to British politics. Why is cheap food seen as a good thing if it demeans the real values of those who grow it? Why is land labour so vulnerable to exploitation? These are not easy questions but this book places them fair and square on our plates as well as minds.

-Tim Lang, Professor Emeritus of Food Policy, City St George’s, University of London

 

Revaluing Horticultural Skills offers an insightful account of the deep social injustices that arise from the devaluing of horticulture work and workers. This is a vital, timely book for people who care about just and sustainable food systems.

-Associate Professor Victoria Stead, Deakin University, Australia