Food security and sociopolitical stability / edited by Christopher B. Barrett
- Additional Titles
- Food security & sociopolitical stability
- Published
- New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2013.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource (xx, 489 pages) : illustrations, charts
- Additional Creators
- Barrett, Christopher B. (Christopher Brendan)
Access Online
- Contents
- Food or consequences: food security and its implications for global sociopolitical stability / Christopher B. Barrett -- The future of the global food economy: scenarios for supply, demand, and prices / Mark W. Rosegrant, Simla Tokgoz, and Prapti Bhandary -- What do we know about the climate of the next decade? / Mark A. Cane and Dong Eun Lee -- The global land rush / Klaus Deininger -- Global freshwater and food security in the face of potential adversity / Upmanu Lall -- Managing marine resources for food and human security / Timothy R. McClanahan, Eddie H. Allison, and Joshua E. Cinner -- Crop technologies for the coming decade / Susan McCouch and Samuel Crowell -- Livestock futures to 2020: how will they shape food, environmental, health, and global security? / John McDermott, Dolapo Enahoro, and Mario Herrero -- Labor migration and food security in a changing climate / Robert McLeman -- Trade policies and global food security / Kym Anderson -- Food security and political stability: a humanitarian perspective / Daniel Maxwell -- Moral economies of food security and protest in Latin America / Wendy Wolford and Ryan Nehring -- Food security and sociopolitical stability in Sub-Saharan Africa / Christopher B. Barrett and Joanna B. Upton -- Lessons from the Arab Spring: food security and stability in the Middle East and North Africa / Travis J. Lybbert and Heather R. Morgan -- Food security and sociopolitical stability in Eastern Europe and Central Asia / Johan Swinnen and Kristine Van Herck -- Food security and sociopolitical stability in South Asia / Arun Agrawal -- When China runs out of farmers / Luc Christiaensen -- Food security and sociopolitical stability in East and Southeast Asia / C. Peter Timmer.
- Summary
- "Global food price spikes in 2008 and again in 2011 coincided with a surge of political unrest in low- and middle-income countries. Angry consumers took to the streets in scores of nations. In some places, food riots turned violent, pressuring governments and in a few cases contributed to their overthrow. Foreign investors sparked a new global land rush, adding a different set of pressures. With scientists cautioning that the world has entered a new era of steadily rising food prices, perhaps aggravated by climate change, the specter of widespread food insecurity and sociopolitical instability weighs on policymakers worldwide. In the past few years, governments and philanthropic foundations began redoubling efforts to resuscitate agricultural research and technology transfer, as well as to accelerate the modernization of food value chains to deliver high quality food inexpensively, faster, and in greater volumes to urban consumers. But will these efforts suffice? This volume explores the complex relationship between food security and sociopolitical stability up to roughly 2025. Organized around a series of original essays by leading global technical experts, a key message of this volume is that actions taken in an effort to address food security stressors may have consequences for food security, stability, or both that ultimately matter far more than the direct impacts of biophysical drivers such as climate or land or water scarcity. The means by which governments, firms, and private philanthropies tackle the food security challenge of the coming decade will fundamentally shape the relationship between food security and sociopolitical stability."--Publisher's description
- Subject(s)
- ISBN
- 9780191668708 (electronic bk.)
0191668702 (electronic bk.)
9780191758430
0191758434
0199679363
9780199679362 - Digital File Characteristics
- data file
- Note
- Includes index.
- Bibliography Note
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
View MARC record | catkey: 43192597