Course Instructors
Marcia Caton Campbell, MCRP, PhD, Executive Director, Rooted
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Marcia Caton Campbell is a city and regional planner who has worked on community and regional food systems planning, policy, and development for over twenty-five years. She is co-editor, with Dr. Samina Raja et al., of Planning for Equitable Urban Agriculture in the United States: Future Directions for a New Ethic in City Building (Springer, forthcoming January 2024). Marcia is also co-author of Urban Agriculture: Growing Healthy, Sustainable Places (American Planning Association, 2011) with Kimberley Hodgson and Martin Bailkey. She has served on the Dane County Food Council and the City of Madison Task Force on Farmland Preservation, and is a past Chair of the American Planning Association Food Systems Division. Marcia received a master’s degree and a PhD in city and regional planning from The Ohio State University.
Martin Bailkey, PhD, Special Projects Manager, Rooted
Pronouns: he/him/his
Martin Bailkey is Special Project Manager on the Promise of Urban Agriculture project, a joint partnership and project of Cornell Small Farms Program, Rooted, and the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service. Martin has worked in urban agriculture for over 25 years, mostly in front of a computer screen rather than in the field. He has been connected for years and in various ways with the groupings and organizations that eventually became Rooted. Martin is co-editor, with Steve Ventura, of Good Food, Strong Communities: Promoting Social Justice through Local and Regional Food Systems (University of Iowa Press, 2017), and has published many articles on urban agriculture. Along with Marcia Caton Campbell and Kimberley Hodgson, Martin wrote Urban Agriculture: Growing Healthy, Sustainable Places (2011) for the American Planning Association’s Planning Advisory Service report series. Previously, he served as a member of the Madison Food Policy Council. Martin received his PhD in urban and regional planning from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Anu Rangarajan, Director, Cornell Small Farms Program
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Anu spent her childhood tending a garden in a suburb of Detroit and learned about vegetable growing from a WWII veteran. She pursued this love of plants and soil at Michigan State University, majoring in Horticulture, followed by a Masters at the University of Wisconsin, in Madison, in controlled environment agriculture and a PhD in vegetable production and physiology. She joined the faculty of Horticulture at Cornell University in 1996, as the Statewide Fresh Market Vegetable Specialist. Her research focuses on innovative crop and soil management that balances triple-bottom line goals for growers and society. In 2004, she was appointed director the Cornell Small Farms Program, which has a mission to support and uplift small-scale farming as a dignified, viable and meaningful livelihood by providing intentional, innovative and inclusive services. In 2013, the program started creating materials focused operating a small farm in urban spaces, which resulted in the collaboration that has created the ‘Promise of Urban Agriculture’ study and these courses.