| Literature DB >> 24555109 |
M Jahi Chappell1, Hannah Wittman2, Christopher M Bacon3, Bruce G Ferguson4, Luis García Barrios4, Raúl García Barrios5, Daniel Jaffee6, Jefferson Lima7, V Ernesto Méndez8, Helda Morales4, Lorena Soto-Pinto4, John Vandermeer9, Ivette Perfecto10.
Abstract
Strong feedback between global biodiversity loss and persistent, extreme rural poverty are major challenges in the face of concurrent food, energy, and environmental crises. This paper examines the role of industrial agricultural intensification and market integration as exogenous socio-ecological drivers of biodiversity loss and poverty traps in Latin America. We then analyze the potential of a food sovereignty framework, based on protecting the viability of a diverse agroecological matrix while supporting rural livelihoods and global food production. We review several successful examples of this approach, including ecological land reform in Brazil, agroforestry, milpa, and the uses of wild varieties in smallholder systems in Mexico and Central America. We highlight emergent research directions that will be necessary to assess the potential of the food sovereignty model to promote both biodiversity conservation and poverty reduction.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24555109 PMCID: PMC3869480 DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.2-235.v1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: F1000Res ISSN: 2046-1402
Conventional Agriculture vs Food Sovereignty Model (adapted from Reardon and Pérez (2010) [227] and Rosset (2003) [228]).
| Issue | Conventional agriculture | Food sovereignty model |
|---|---|---|
|
| A commodity of trade, sold in
| A human right, secured through
|
|
| Industrial, petroleum-based,
| Agroecological, low-input, diverse,
|
|
| Scientific and based on
| A combination of scientific and
|
|
| High yields based on hybrid and
| High yields based on locally
|
|
| Commercial farmers with large
| Smallholder and medium scale
|
|
| Specialization on a few (often
| Diverse multifunctional systems |
|
| Supports very low levels of wild
| Supports high levels of wild
|
|
| Homogeneous. Tend to be
| Heterogeneous. Landscape
|
|
| Extractivist. Burden of restoration
| Controlled locally to sustain
|
|
| A commodity of trade, patentable | Patrimony of all humanity,
|
|
| Tied to production, tends to favor
| Directed to smallholder farmers to
|