There is a longstanding debate among agricultural development stakeholders: state-led versus market-led strategies to transform food systems. While narratives provide an important framework to better understand this policy dichotomy and the choices of decision-makers, they are often neglected in food systems policy-making processes. The authors recommend making use of policy narratives to find a way to solve real-world problems
In both developed and developing countries, agricultural support policies provide enormous transfers...
The current structure of the global food system is increasingly recognized as unsustainable. In addi...
Presented at the GLOBELICS 6th International Conference 2008 22-24 September, Mexico City, Mexico
While there is renewed interest to promote agricultural development, there is a lively policy debate...
We propose that agroecology provides a framework for understanding ‘levels’ for the transition to su...
There is a concern that agriculture will no longer be able to meet, on a global scale, the growing d...
While there is renewed interest to promote agricultural development, there is a lively policy debate...
The ‘modernist’ project that has come to dominate food and agricultural policy has failed to provide...
In this introductory article, we highlight debates that emerged in the IDS–IPES-Food workshop on the...
Amidst multiple reinforcing social and ecological crises dominant development agencies are discursiv...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
Economic interventions are rarely free of debate, hence it should come as no surprise that governmen...
Now more than ever, evidence overwhelmingly concludes that our food systems are not currently workin...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
In both developed and developing countries, agricultural support policies provide enormous transfers...
The current structure of the global food system is increasingly recognized as unsustainable. In addi...
Presented at the GLOBELICS 6th International Conference 2008 22-24 September, Mexico City, Mexico
While there is renewed interest to promote agricultural development, there is a lively policy debate...
We propose that agroecology provides a framework for understanding ‘levels’ for the transition to su...
There is a concern that agriculture will no longer be able to meet, on a global scale, the growing d...
While there is renewed interest to promote agricultural development, there is a lively policy debate...
The ‘modernist’ project that has come to dominate food and agricultural policy has failed to provide...
In this introductory article, we highlight debates that emerged in the IDS–IPES-Food workshop on the...
Amidst multiple reinforcing social and ecological crises dominant development agencies are discursiv...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
Economic interventions are rarely free of debate, hence it should come as no surprise that governmen...
Now more than ever, evidence overwhelmingly concludes that our food systems are not currently workin...
Evidence shows the importance of food systems for sustainable development: they are at the nexus tha...
In both developed and developing countries, agricultural support policies provide enormous transfers...
The current structure of the global food system is increasingly recognized as unsustainable. In addi...
Presented at the GLOBELICS 6th International Conference 2008 22-24 September, Mexico City, Mexico