At present, the global population is half rural and half urban, but the world’s cities are swelling. By 2025, two-thirds of the world’s people will live in urban areas, and 80 percent of these urban residents will live in developing countries. As urbanization increases, policymakers in developing countries will be challenged to design ways to feed their cities ideally by relying mostly on their countries’ own agriculture sectors. They must also work to prevent undernutrition, cope with changing diets among urban residents and seek to quell the trend toward obesity
Urban expansion in Asia is concentrated in metropolitan areas. This has adversely affected in-city f...
The belief that cities are for industry and that the countryside is for farming is outdated. Urban f...
open2noThe research leading to this publication has received funding from the European Union’s Horiz...
The trend is inescapable: more and more people in the developing world are living in the cities. By ...
Rapid urbanization is a defining feature of low-income countries, even as rural populations continue...
Urban agriculture has considerable potential to improve food security in the developing world. Summ...
[From Introduction] Globally, the growth of urbanised areas continues at an exponential rate, and mo...
Data from many countries show that the concentration of poverty and malnutrition is shifting from ru...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Cities and agriculture seem two incompatible worlds. Yet we are seeing more and more urban agricultu...
Urban agriculture has served for a long time as a vital asset in the livelihood strategies of urban ...
Agriculture represents a crucial phase in the development of mankind. Although cities initially had ...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
The belief that cities are for industry and that the countryside is for farming is outdated. Urban f...
Urban expansion in Asia is concentrated in metropolitan areas. This has adversely affected in-city f...
The belief that cities are for industry and that the countryside is for farming is outdated. Urban f...
open2noThe research leading to this publication has received funding from the European Union’s Horiz...
The trend is inescapable: more and more people in the developing world are living in the cities. By ...
Rapid urbanization is a defining feature of low-income countries, even as rural populations continue...
Urban agriculture has considerable potential to improve food security in the developing world. Summ...
[From Introduction] Globally, the growth of urbanised areas continues at an exponential rate, and mo...
Data from many countries show that the concentration of poverty and malnutrition is shifting from ru...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Cities and agriculture seem two incompatible worlds. Yet we are seeing more and more urban agricultu...
Urban agriculture has served for a long time as a vital asset in the livelihood strategies of urban ...
Agriculture represents a crucial phase in the development of mankind. Although cities initially had ...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
Urban agricultural projects have been mushrooming since the end of the twentieth century, reshaping ...
The belief that cities are for industry and that the countryside is for farming is outdated. Urban f...
Urban expansion in Asia is concentrated in metropolitan areas. This has adversely affected in-city f...
The belief that cities are for industry and that the countryside is for farming is outdated. Urban f...
open2noThe research leading to this publication has received funding from the European Union’s Horiz...