Publication

Food production : food security and agricultural development

Thompson, Paul B.
Contributor(s)
Keywords
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
food security
SDG2:Zero Hunger
GE Subjects
Development ethics
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
Conceptualizations of the ethical issues surrounding food production have evolved from a preoccupation with hunger and economic development to relatively new formulations that emphasize food security and food sovereignty. This chapter traces this evolution from work by economists, population ecologists and philosophers from the 1960s through critiques of the Green Revolution and technology-focused approaches to transforming food production in relatively less-industrialized regions. In the present day, the food security focus emphasizes individual or household capabilities for acquiring and consuming adequate nutrition and evaluates social institutions for processing and distributing nutrients in terms of both biophysical food requirements and cultural appropriateness. Food sovereignty has emerged as a philosophical approach that challenges the food security approach as lacking sufficient sensitivity toward vulnerable or marginalized groups to assert or maintain political control over the structure of their food system.
Note(s)
Topic
Type
Book chapter
Date
2018
Identifier
ISBN
9781315626796
DOI
Copyright/License
Taylor and Francis Group (SDG Online collection)
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Embedded videos