Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments

Central to understanding the political economy of food systems transformation is clarifying the systems that enable—or prevent—monitoring progress on transformation, setting evidence-based commitments for improvement, and ensuring accountability for delivering on them. Prior chapters in this volume...

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Main Authors: Nordhagen, Stella, Fanzo, Jessica
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140126
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author Nordhagen, Stella
Fanzo, Jessica
author_browse Fanzo, Jessica
Nordhagen, Stella
author_facet Nordhagen, Stella
Fanzo, Jessica
author_sort Nordhagen, Stella
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Central to understanding the political economy of food systems transformation is clarifying the systems that enable—or prevent—monitoring progress on transformation, setting evidence-based commitments for improvement, and ensuring accountability for delivering on them. Prior chapters in this volume have elucidated the role of data and evidence in settling fact-based policy disagreements (Chapter 2) and described some of the challenges that arise when disinformation and bias instead dominate policy discussions (Chapter 1). They have also given specific examples of how evidence can galvanize attention to an issue, as in the case of obesity prevention (Chapters 6 and 7) or environmental sustainability (Chapter 11), or support the case for policy change, as in the case of agricultural subsidies or direct payments (Chapters 3 and 4). And they have highlighted the need to track how well policies are implemented (Chapter 6) as well as their intended and unintended consequences (Chapter 3). Jointly, the prior chapters have made clear that monitoring food system transformation can play a central role in several different political economy spaces described in the first chapter of this volume, such as policy mobilization, design, and adaptation. This chapter thus builds on this foundation to examine prior attempts at monitoring food systems and ensuring accountability. After highlighting existing gaps and why new approaches are needed, we present selected options for filling these gaps. We then conclude with a discussion of what else, besides information, is needed to foster the broader accountability cycle—and thus to support the process of food system transformation amid the types of political economy challenges described in the prior challenges.
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spelling CGSpace1401262025-11-06T04:15:44Z Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments Nordhagen, Stella Fanzo, Jessica sustainable development goals policies agricultural policies transformation reforms food systems accountability governance Central to understanding the political economy of food systems transformation is clarifying the systems that enable—or prevent—monitoring progress on transformation, setting evidence-based commitments for improvement, and ensuring accountability for delivering on them. Prior chapters in this volume have elucidated the role of data and evidence in settling fact-based policy disagreements (Chapter 2) and described some of the challenges that arise when disinformation and bias instead dominate policy discussions (Chapter 1). They have also given specific examples of how evidence can galvanize attention to an issue, as in the case of obesity prevention (Chapters 6 and 7) or environmental sustainability (Chapter 11), or support the case for policy change, as in the case of agricultural subsidies or direct payments (Chapters 3 and 4). And they have highlighted the need to track how well policies are implemented (Chapter 6) as well as their intended and unintended consequences (Chapter 3). Jointly, the prior chapters have made clear that monitoring food system transformation can play a central role in several different political economy spaces described in the first chapter of this volume, such as policy mobilization, design, and adaptation. This chapter thus builds on this foundation to examine prior attempts at monitoring food systems and ensuring accountability. After highlighting existing gaps and why new approaches are needed, we present selected options for filling these gaps. We then conclude with a discussion of what else, besides information, is needed to foster the broader accountability cycle—and thus to support the process of food system transformation amid the types of political economy challenges described in the prior challenges. 2023-10-16 2024-03-14T12:08:57Z 2024-03-14T12:08:57Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140126 en https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198882121.001.0001 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Oxford University Press Nordhagen, Stella; and Fanzo, Jessica. 2023. Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments. In The Political Economy of Food System Transformation Pathways to Progress in a Polarized World, eds. Danielle Resnick and Johan Swinnen. Chapter 14, Pp. 338-359. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198882121.003.0014.
spellingShingle sustainable development goals
policies
agricultural policies
transformation
reforms
food systems
accountability
governance
Nordhagen, Stella
Fanzo, Jessica
Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title_full Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title_fullStr Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title_full_unstemmed Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title_short Tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
title_sort tracking progress and generating accountability for global food system commitments
topic sustainable development goals
policies
agricultural policies
transformation
reforms
food systems
accountability
governance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140126
work_keys_str_mv AT nordhagenstella trackingprogressandgeneratingaccountabilityforglobalfoodsystemcommitments
AT fanzojessica trackingprogressandgeneratingaccountabilityforglobalfoodsystemcommitments