Food System Resilience: Concepts, Issues, and Challenges

Food system resilience has multiple dimensions. We draw on food system and resilience concepts and review resilience framings of different communities. We present four questions to frame food system resilience (Resilience of what? Resilience to what? Resilience from whose perspective? Resilience for...

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Hauptverfasser: Zurek, M, Ingram, J, Sanderson Bellamy, A, Goold, C, Lyon, C, Alexander, P, Barnes, A, Bebber, DP, Breeze, TD, Bruce, A, Collins, LM, Davies, J, Doherty, B, Ensor, J, Franco, SC, Gatto, A, Hess, T, Lamprinopoulou, C, Liu, L, Merkle, M, Norton, L, Oliver, T, Ollerton, J, Potts, S, Reed, MS, Sutcliffe, C, Withers, PJA
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Food system resilience has multiple dimensions. We draw on food system and resilience concepts and review resilience framings of different communities. We present four questions to frame food system resilience (Resilience of what? Resilience to what? Resilience from whose perspective? Resilience for how long?) and three approaches to enhancing resilience (robustness, recovery, and reorientation—the three “Rs”). We focus on enhancing resilience of food system outcomes and argue this will require food system actors adapting their activities, noting that activities do not change spontaneously but in response to a change in drivers: an opportunity or a threat. However, operationalizing resilience enhancement involves normative choices and will result in decisions having to be negotiated about trade-offs among food system outcomes for different stakeholders. New approaches to including different food system actors’ perceptions and goals are needed to build food systems that are better positioned to address challenges of the future.
DOI:10.1146/annurev-environ-112320-050744