| Literature DB >> 30956691 |
Patrick Caron1,2, Gabriel Ferrero Y de Loma-Osorio3, David Nabarro4, Etienne Hainzelin1,5, Marion Guillou6, Inger Andersen7, Tom Arnold8, Margarita Astralaga9, Marcel Beukeboom10, Sam Bickersteth11, Martin Bwalya12, Paula Caballero13, Bruce M Campbell14, Ntiokam Divine15, Shenggen Fan16, Martin Frick17, Anette Friis18, Martin Gallagher19, Jean-Pierre Halkin20, Craig Hanson21, Florence Lasbennes22, Teresa Ribera23, Johan Rockstrom24, Marlen Schuepbach25, Andrew Steer21, Ann Tutwiler26, Gerda Verburg25.
Abstract
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus that links food security, nutrition, and human health, the viability of ecosystems, climate change, and social justice. However, agricultural policies tend to focus on food supply, and sometimes, on mechanisms to address negative externalities. We propose an alternative. Our starting point is that agriculture and food systems' policies should be aligned to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. This calls for deep changes in comparison with the paradigms that prevailed when steering the agricultural change in the XXth century. We identify the comprehensive food systems transformation that is needed. It has four parts: first, food systems should enable all people to benefit from nutritious and healthy food. Second, they should reflect sustainable agricultural production and food value chains. Third, they should mitigate climate change and build resilience. Fourth, they should encourage a renaissance of rural territories. The implementation of the transformation relies on (i) suitable metrics to aid decision-making, (ii) synergy of policies through convergence of local and global priorities, and (iii) enhancement of development approaches that focus on territories. We build on the work of the "Milano Group," an informal group of experts convened by the UN Secretary General in Milan in 2015. Backed by a literature review, what emerges is a strategic narrative linking climate, agriculture and food, and calling for a deep transformation of food systems at scale. This is critical for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement. The narrative highlights the needed consistency between global actions for sustainable development and numerous local-level innovations. It emphasizes the challenge of designing differentiated paths for food systems transformation responding to local and national expectations. Scientific and operational challenges are associated with the alignment and arbitration of local action within the context of global priorities.Entities:
Keywords: Agriculture; Climate change; Food systems; Koronivia; Nexus; Sustainable development; Transformation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30956691 PMCID: PMC6417402 DOI: 10.1007/s13593-018-0519-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Agron Sustain Dev ISSN: 1773-0155 Impact factor: 5.832
Fig. 1Vibrant and innovative local-specific human-driven systems as engine for a profound food system transformation (source: N. Le Gall/Cirad—Année international des Forêts 2011). Illustrates the profound food system transformation that is required to achieve the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development and the Paris Agreement on Climate and that is made of four parts (nutritious and healthy food, sustainable agricultural production and food value chains, mitigation of climate change and resilience, renaissance of rural territories). Such a transformation relies on the capacity to design and implement local specific innovation based initiatives to address local and national expectations through diverse adapted pathways. It also depends on the capacity to stimulate such initiatives and to orchestrate such a transformation at the global level to ensure orientation and consistency among scales
Fig. 2Assessing the food systems transformation capacity to address the Agenda 2030 through the agriculture–food and nutrition security–environment health–climate–social justice nexus. Suggests a general framework for food systems transformation by highlighting the four parts, each of which can be characterized with specific variables. These can be used to design relevant indicators for assessing the impact of system transformation