Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world

Multilateralism, as epitomized by Western liberal hegemony and the concomitant intergovernmental agreements and institutions set up after World War II, is in crisis. Reductions in development funding coupled with inadequate climate action and limited progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals...

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Autores principales: Schuttenbelt, Daan, Thorton, Philip, Dinesh, Dhanush, Loboguerrero, Ana Maria, Martinez-Baron, Deissy
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177961
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author Schuttenbelt, Daan
Thorton, Philip
Dinesh, Dhanush
Loboguerrero, Ana Maria
Martinez-Baron, Deissy
author_browse Dinesh, Dhanush
Loboguerrero, Ana Maria
Martinez-Baron, Deissy
Schuttenbelt, Daan
Thorton, Philip
author_facet Schuttenbelt, Daan
Thorton, Philip
Dinesh, Dhanush
Loboguerrero, Ana Maria
Martinez-Baron, Deissy
author_sort Schuttenbelt, Daan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Multilateralism, as epitomized by Western liberal hegemony and the concomitant intergovernmental agreements and institutions set up after World War II, is in crisis. Reductions in development funding coupled with inadequate climate action and limited progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals do not bode well for the challenges that food systems are increasingly facing. In crisis lies opportunity, however. Here, the outputs of a process lasting several months are described, involving stakeholders and experts from organizations ranging from funders, NGOs, government, the private sector, and research institutes, whose objective was to consider what is needed to facilitate the move toward more sustainable and equitable food systems. Along with a scan of recent writings on alternative narrative framings of food systems as drivers of behavioral change, one output of this process was the identification of five potential elements of a modified global architecture for accelerating climate action in food systems. These five were embracing multiplicity, expanding localism, addressing justice, being positive and inclusive in messaging, and out-competing legacy systems. These are neither new nor original ideas, but if actioned together their implications could be far-reaching for those working at the intersection of agricultural development and climate. Some planned, concrete actions for each element are briefly described—the early stages of an organizational experiment to gauge their effectiveness in contributing to food system reconfiguration at different scales.
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spelling CGSpace1779612025-12-08T10:29:22Z Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world Schuttenbelt, Daan Thorton, Philip Dinesh, Dhanush Loboguerrero, Ana Maria Martinez-Baron, Deissy climate change food systems governance development Multilateralism, as epitomized by Western liberal hegemony and the concomitant intergovernmental agreements and institutions set up after World War II, is in crisis. Reductions in development funding coupled with inadequate climate action and limited progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals do not bode well for the challenges that food systems are increasingly facing. In crisis lies opportunity, however. Here, the outputs of a process lasting several months are described, involving stakeholders and experts from organizations ranging from funders, NGOs, government, the private sector, and research institutes, whose objective was to consider what is needed to facilitate the move toward more sustainable and equitable food systems. Along with a scan of recent writings on alternative narrative framings of food systems as drivers of behavioral change, one output of this process was the identification of five potential elements of a modified global architecture for accelerating climate action in food systems. These five were embracing multiplicity, expanding localism, addressing justice, being positive and inclusive in messaging, and out-competing legacy systems. These are neither new nor original ideas, but if actioned together their implications could be far-reaching for those working at the intersection of agricultural development and climate. Some planned, concrete actions for each element are briefly described—the early stages of an organizational experiment to gauge their effectiveness in contributing to food system reconfiguration at different scales. 2025-10-29 2025-11-17T12:48:54Z 2025-11-17T12:48:54Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177961 en Open Access application/pdf SAGE Publications Schuttenbelt, D.; Thorton, P.; Dinesh, D.; Loboguerrero, A.M.; Martinez-Baron, D. (2025) Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world. Outlook on Agriculture, Online first paper (2025-10-29). ISSN: 0030-7270
spellingShingle climate change
food systems
governance
development
Schuttenbelt, Daan
Thorton, Philip
Dinesh, Dhanush
Loboguerrero, Ana Maria
Martinez-Baron, Deissy
Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title_full Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title_fullStr Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title_full_unstemmed Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title_short Harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
title_sort harvesting hope for climate action and food systems in a grave new world
topic climate change
food systems
governance
development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177961
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