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Statement based on the 4th International conference on global food security – December 2020 : Challenges for a disruptive research Agenda

Authors :
Caron, P.
van Ittersum, M.
Avermaete, T.
Brunori, G.
Fanzo, J.
Giller, K.
Hainzelin, E.
Ingram, J.
Korsten, L.
Martin-Prével, Y.
Osiru, M.
Palm, C.
Ferre, M.R.
Rufino, M.
Schneider, S.
Thomas, A.
Walker, D.
Caron, P.
van Ittersum, M.
Avermaete, T.
Brunori, G.
Fanzo, J.
Giller, K.
Hainzelin, E.
Ingram, J.
Korsten, L.
Martin-Prével, Y.
Osiru, M.
Palm, C.
Ferre, M.R.
Rufino, M.
Schneider, S.
Thomas, A.
Walker, D.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The 4th Global Food Security conference highlighted four major developments: the shift from food security to food systems; a focus on diets and consumption patterns; the importance of unknown futures and inherent uncertainties and risks; and the central role of multi-level connections between local- and global-oriented research. These shifts highlight the importance for research to contribute to dialogue and collective intelligence through evidence-based brokerage, and to move beyond polarization of debates. These shifts also call for the involvement of scientists in multi-stakeholder arrangements to strengthen innovation and learning at different levels, and for their participation in foresight studies to help navigate plausible futures. Delegates discussed five scientific challenges to be addressed through both research investments and by improving science-policy interfaces. © 2021

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/165849/1/Caron_et_al_GFS_statement_2021.pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1425766018
Document Type :
Electronic Resource