Fanzo Jessica, Haddad Lawrence, Schneider Kate R., Bene Chris, Covic Namukolo, Guarin Alejandro, Herforth Anna, Herrero Acosta Mario, Sumaila Ussif Rashid, Aburto Nancy J., Amuyunzu-Nyamongo Mary, Barquera Simon, Battersby Jane, Beal Ty, Bizzotto Molina Paulina, Brusset Emery, Cafiero Carlo, Campeau Christine, Caron Patrick, et al.. 2021. Viewpoint: Rigorous monitoring is necessary to guide food system transformation in the countdown to the 2030 global goals. Food Policy, 104:102163, 20 p.
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Quartile : Q1, Sujet : AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY / Quartile : Q1, Sujet : ECONOMICS / Quartile : Q1, Sujet : FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY / Quartile : Q1, Sujet : NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Liste HCERES des revues (en SHS) : oui
Thème(s) HCERES des revues (en SHS) : Economie-gestion
Résumé : Food systems that support healthy diets in sustainable, resilient, just, and equitable ways can engender progress in eradicating poverty and malnutrition; protecting human rights; and restoring natural resources. Food system activities have contributed to great gains for humanity but have also led to significant challenges, including hunger, poor diet quality, inequity, and threats to nature. While it is recognized that food systems are central to multiple global commitments and goals, including the Sustainable Development Goals, current trajectories are not aligned to meet these objectives. As mounting crises further stress food systems, the consequences of inaction are clear. The goal of food system transformation is to generate a future where all people have access to healthy diets, which are produced in sustainable and resilient ways that restore nature and deliver just, equitable livelihoods. A rigorous, science-based monitoring framework can support evidence-based policymaking and the work of those who hold key actors accountable in this transformation process. Monitoring can illustrate current performance, facilitate comparisons across geographies and over time, and track progress. We propose a framework centered around five thematic areas related to (1) diets, nutrition, and health; (2) environment and climate; and (3) livelihoods, poverty, and equity; (4) governance; and (5) resilience and sustainability. We hope to call attention to the need to monitor food systems globally to inform decisions and support accountability for better governance of food systems as part of the transformation process. Transformation is possible in the next decade, but rigorous evidence is needed in the countdown to the 2030 SDG global goals.
Mots-clés Agrovoc : sécurité alimentaire, systèmes alimentaires, politique alimentaire, qualité des aliments, durabilité, pauvreté, alimentation humaine, régime alimentaire, alimentation saine
Mots-clés libres : Sustainable development goals, Healthy diets, Sustainable food systems, Sustainable livelihoods, Food system governance, Food system resilience
Auteurs et affiliations
- Fanzo Jessica, Johns Hopkins University (USA) - auteur correspondant
- Haddad Lawrence, GAIN (USA)
- Schneider Kate R., Johns Hopkins University (USA)
- Bene Chris, International Center for Tropical Agriculture (COL)
- Covic Namukolo, IFPRI (USA)
- Guarin Alejandro, IIED (GBR)
- Herforth Anna, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health (USA)
- Herrero Acosta Mario, Cornell University (USA)
- Sumaila Ussif Rashid, University of British Columbia (CAN)
- Aburto Nancy J., FAO (ITA)
- Amuyunzu-Nyamongo Mary, African Institute for Health and Development (KEN)
- Barquera Simon, National Institute of Public Health (MEX)
- Battersby Jane, UCT (ZAF)
- Beal Ty, GAIN (USA)
- Bizzotto Molina Paulina, ECDPM (NLD)
- Brusset Emery, United Nations World Food Programme (ITA)
- Cafiero Carlo, FAO (ITA)
- Campeau Christine, Food Systems Policy and Advocacy Department (USA)
- Caron Patrick, CIRAD-ES-UMR ART-DEV (FRA) ORCID: 0000-0002-8494-2243
- et al.
Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/606187/)
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