Effect of Food Security in Climate Change

1254 Words3 Pages

Food security is defined by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United

Nations (FAO) as “a condition in which all people, at all times, have physical and economic

access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences

for an active and healthy life.” According to Mustafa Koc’s presentation, food security

should be viewed as both a societal objective as well as a discourse where the need to for

looking at the bigger picture is an evident theme. He explores reasons as to why there is food

insecurity and alludes back to the fact that food is often seen as a commodity, not as a human

right. This rights-based perception of food security relates to that presented in Oxfam’s

Handbook of Development and Relief where it stresses that every human being has the right

to adequate and affordable food, and that both hunger and malnutrition are forms of injustice

that must be eliminated by every possible means. That being said, food security has a direct

link to the United Nation’s Millennium Development Goal (MDG) to eradicate extreme

poverty and hunger. However, producing a sufficient quantity of food to feed our expanding

global population while trying to stabilize our climate system, presents some great challenges.

Food system, as defined by Mustafa Koc in his guest lecture presentation, is a “complex

web of social relations, processes, structures and institutional arrangements that cover human

interaction with nature and with other humans throughout the food cycle from production to

consumption and even further.” Our current global food system is not sustainable. It does not

provide adequate nutrition to everyone worldwide, yet it allows for some populations to

over-consum...

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...cause and effect relationship of climate and human activity, and climate and human need, the ability to redesign the way we produce and cultivate food staples can be created. With this ability the longevity of agricultural systems can influence a decrease in food prices, in turn increasing the number of food secure populations.

Works Cited

1 http://www.climatechange-foodsecurity.org/africa.html

2 http://www.wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2012/05/24/000426104_20120524164749/Rendered/PDF/690860ESW0P1050Climate0Change0Risks.pdf

3 http://www.farmingfirst.org/2010/07/climate-change-risks-and-food-security-in-bangladesh/

4 http://www.farmingfirst.org/2010/07/climate-change-risks-and-food-security-in-bangladesh/

5 http://dels.nas.edu/resources/static-assets/materials-based-on-reports/reports-in-brief/Systems-Ag-Report-Brief.pdf

7

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