Skip to main content

ASU senior focuses on improving food security


ASU senior Mariah Leick.

|
March 16, 2018

Today, there is a lot of focus on ensuring that industries and technologies are sustainable. The world’s agricultural system is no different, and for Mariah Leick, a senior at Arizona State University, food systems sustainability is an important issue to be tackled.

Leick first gained interest in food systems after getting involved with the ASU Grow community garden her freshman year. The club focuses on “square foot gardening, a method that can efficiently grow a large number of plants in a relatively small area,” enabling the group to utilize a more eco- and water-friendly way to grow large amounts of crops.

In addition to working with ASU Grow, Leick has gotten involved in the local community, working with a group in Chandler in the Faith Community Garden. This garden emphasizes not only sustainable food systems but also building strong ties between “church members, neighborhood individuals and local refugees.” This involves numerous activities, from mulching to recording the group’s meeting minutes.

Leick has also gotten involved with multicultural groups on campus and through study abroad France. In Lyon, she was “involved in two student organizations and obtained a volunteer-ship teaching English and facilitating conversation groups for French nationals through a local non-profit, Le Phare d'Amitié.” She also got involved with ASU’s Global Launch Intensive English program teaching non-native speakers.

“At Global Launch, I befriended and encouraged international learners from around the world to develop their confidence and fluency in English by aiding teachers in the classrooms, facilitating weekly conversation groups, assisting at extracurricular activities and workshops, and engaging with students during cultural events and field trips,” she said.

When discussing her plans post-graduation, Leick said she plans on continuing her work with food systems sustainability “at both the grassroots and institutional levels to enact change in the U.S. and in international contexts.” After gaining more experience, Leick plans on attending graduate school. She then hopes to work with initiatives such as USAID’s Feed the Future or other non-governmental organizations to work toward improving food security.

More Environment and sustainability

 

Reasons for being sustainable written on an outdoor chalkboard.

Earth Day celebrations focus on making our planet a priority

On April 22, Earth Day is celebrated across the country and in nearly 193 countries around the world.  Arizona State University…

April 12, 2024
Aerial view of a harvesting machine in a corn field.

ASU scientist studies how bans, regulations on food technology affect consumer acceptance, perceptions

How do people process scientific developments with outside influences, warnings, biases and others’ opinions filtering in?  That…

April 12, 2024
Sunset and red sky behind the skyline of Phoenix

ASU team's research leads to new law protecting mobile-home dwellers

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs signed a law earlier this month that guarantees mobile-home owners’ right to install cooling measures,…

April 11, 2024