The Global Alliance for the Future of Food, a group of philanthropic organizations, has published a guide for government action on improving food systems.
It's supported by a collection of case studies from around the globe:
In the government guide the lenses through which issues are seen are those of health: human health, ecological health, animal health. Recommendations in this document are cross-referenced to insights from the stories in the case study document. A table documents which case studies reflect which recommendations.
In the case study document little ikons show which of the recommendations are illustrated by each study. This strikes me as a very useful model for presenting information about food system change. Some people learn best from lists and tables, others need stories and visuals. Many reports would be improved by saying a little less but presenting in several forms and with differing approaches.
Unlike in many international documents advocating for food system change, this one requires a bit of drill down to find the word agroecology. Also, none of the recommendations touch on access to land.
Here's the short list of the recommendations:
- Take an integrated and inclusive approach
- Set health-based goals and targets
- Implement mandatory health impact assessment on food policies
- Use multiple, diverse policies
- Leverage agricultural subsidies
- Facilitate affordability of health-promoting foods
- Run health and food safety assessments of international trade agreements and policies
- Support local and small entities
- Develop sustainable dietary guidelines (FBSDGs) and ensure public food procurement standards align with them
- Foster ecological, food, and health literacy
- Invest in public health research and innovation
- Put the precautionary principle at the heart of the research and innovation agenda
- Promote dialogue and collaboration
- Support and commit to international action frameworks
W.K. Kellogg Foundation seems to be a central player in the Alliance. The other principle funder of this report was Fondazione Cariplo, associated with a commercial bank in Milan.
No comments:
Post a Comment