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Food and Justice Action Collaborative Announces Mini Grant Winners

07/18/2024

The Food and Justice Action Collaborative (FJAC) at pro has announced that four teams of faculty and student researchers have received funding through the inaugural round of the FJAC Innovation mini-grant program.

FJAC announced the mini-grant program in early 2024 to support collaborative research and community engagement in the areas of food access, food injustice, food equity, and food security. Faculty, staff, and students from across the University submitted proposals, and in the end, four proposals were selected for funding.

“Food is a basic building block for health and human flourishing,” said Ellen Barnidge, Ph.D., interim vice president for research. “The Office of the Vice President for Research is proud to promote and support research teams addressing food insecurity in St. Louis and around the world.”

Funded projects will examine a diverse range of food-related issues. These include assessing the nutritional value of regionally sourced acorn flour used in a popular St. Louis restaurant; identifying and reducing participation barriers in federal nutrition programs; studying the efficacy of distribution networks used by a nonprofit based in Haiti to address child malnutrition; and developing and distributing new nutritional resources for underserved patients in St. Louis.

“It’s great to see such diverse projects from across campus funded through these grants,” said Anthony Breitbach, Ph.D., professor and director of interprofessional education and FJAC coordinator. “The Food and Justice Action Collaborative (FJAC) was created to shine a spotlight and support existing expertise and projects that will lay the foundation for more robust collaborations. I am excited to see the impact of these funded initiatives moving forward.”

FJAC is an interprofessional collaboration between academics, industry, and the larger regional community to address critical issues in the food ecosystem.  FJAC aims to become a research and innovation hub for food industry service, training, wellness, and programming, enabling people to gain the knowledge and skills they need to lead healthy lives while contributing to positive, systematic change and sustainability in the food ecosystem.

Mini-Grant Recipients

The following projects received funding through the FJAC Innovation mini grant program:
 

“Food Security, Food Equity, and the Humble Acorn”

“Community Conversations: Specialist Views of Federal Nutrition Programs in Multicultural Contexts”

“Efficacy of RUTF distribution in combating maternal mortality and children’s malnutrition: Case study from MFKHaiti”

“Healthy Food Opportunities for Optimal Outcomes (Healthy FOOD)”