Not everything is concrete: ethnobotany in community food gardens of ABC Paulista
National and international agencies recognize the urgency of today's social and ecological issues, where the demographic growth of an extremely unequal population is concentrated in urban centers, based on a productive system that accentuates this inequality while destroys the material basis of its reproduction. In this scenario, urban agroecology is a promising practice for ecological resilience and the guarantee of access to human rights related to the environment, health, nutritional security and food sovereignty in these environments. Constructing an ethnobotanical inventory of the agrobiodiversity of urban gardens in ABC Paulista relating orality, science, knowledge, flavors, imaginary, territoriality and identity expressed in these spaces can contribute to identify actors, unravel the biocultural and ethnoscientific memory involved and understand the transmission dynamics of this knowledge , encouraging the spread of these practices in this territory.