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Rethinking the food security debate in Asia: Some missing ecological and health dimensions and solutions

Version 2 2024-06-04, 03:48
Version 1 2016-07-20, 16:04
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 03:48 authored by ML Wahlqvist, John McKayJohn McKay, YC Chang, YW Chiu
Food security is a global and regional concern of rapidly increasing consequence. It is at risk of inattention because of competing crises, because of its theoretical amenability to previously effective, if temporary measures, most impressively with the so-called Green Revolution and because of the recourse to the global trade paradigm as a putative solution. We identify some missing or under-emphasised dimensions in this analysis, with particular reference to Asia, which in spite of recent growth-or in some cases because of it-faces particularly daunting food problems. Greater emphasis needs to be given to population size and distribution through more concerted family planning and enlightened migration policy; public policy to retain or encourage plant-based diets; integration of food, health and environmental approaches to create resilient regional food systems; and the incorporation of food into the broader human security agenda. While regional organisations, along with their NGO counterparts and nation states, have an over-arching role to strategise in this way, substantial progress could still be made at the community and household levels, especially with current technologies which can marshal their collective and coherent action. © 2012 Springer Science + Business Media B.V. & International Society for Plant Pathology.

History

Journal

Food security

Volume

4

Pagination

657-670

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1876-4517

eISSN

1876-4525

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Springer

Issue

4

Publisher

Springer