The 2005–8 food crisis was a shock to political elites, but in some respects the situation was normal. Food policies are failing to respond adequately to the squeeze on land, people, health and environment. Strong evidence of systems failure and stress, termed here New Fundamentals, ought to reframe twenty-first century food politics and effort. Yet so far, international discourse is too often narrow and technical. The paper suggests that 2005–8 reinforced how the dominant twentieth century productionist policy paradigm is running out of steam. This assumed that producing more food would resolve social problems. Yet distortions in markets, access and culture remain. At national and international levels of governance, despite realization of ...
Looking into the food system through the lens of food security, the first decade of the 21st Century...
The IPES-Food framework calls for closer attention to power relations across the levels of the globa...
Food security has risen up the political agenda, but sufficiency of supply is not the whole challeng...
Food production shocks can lead to food crises where access to appropriate quantities and quality of...
“Food is failing us.” This is the overwhelming consensus from a variety of critical stakeholders, fr...
In the wake of a food crisis that gripped the media's attention during the summer of 2008, a ne...
This paper argues that the food crisis cannot solely be equated with abrupt food price increases or ...
ABSTRACT Peter Rosset examines the current global food price crisis, identifying both long-and short...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to study the magnitude and various causes of the global food ...
The world economy is sliding yet into another recession (having arguably barely recovered from the p...
Tim Lang proposes that a set of \u27New Fundamentals\u27 are now clear yet policy-makers hav...
Dramatic food price increases affected much of the developing world in 2008. Even as food prices hav...
Between early 2007 and mid-2008, global food prices increased by more than fifty percent. For peop...
This article looks at the food policy decisions taken in times of national or global food shortages....
In late 2007 and early 2008, the price of food on international commodity markets rose rapidly to un...
Looking into the food system through the lens of food security, the first decade of the 21st Century...
The IPES-Food framework calls for closer attention to power relations across the levels of the globa...
Food security has risen up the political agenda, but sufficiency of supply is not the whole challeng...
Food production shocks can lead to food crises where access to appropriate quantities and quality of...
“Food is failing us.” This is the overwhelming consensus from a variety of critical stakeholders, fr...
In the wake of a food crisis that gripped the media's attention during the summer of 2008, a ne...
This paper argues that the food crisis cannot solely be equated with abrupt food price increases or ...
ABSTRACT Peter Rosset examines the current global food price crisis, identifying both long-and short...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to study the magnitude and various causes of the global food ...
The world economy is sliding yet into another recession (having arguably barely recovered from the p...
Tim Lang proposes that a set of \u27New Fundamentals\u27 are now clear yet policy-makers hav...
Dramatic food price increases affected much of the developing world in 2008. Even as food prices hav...
Between early 2007 and mid-2008, global food prices increased by more than fifty percent. For peop...
This article looks at the food policy decisions taken in times of national or global food shortages....
In late 2007 and early 2008, the price of food on international commodity markets rose rapidly to un...
Looking into the food system through the lens of food security, the first decade of the 21st Century...
The IPES-Food framework calls for closer attention to power relations across the levels of the globa...
Food security has risen up the political agenda, but sufficiency of supply is not the whole challeng...