Agriculture for nutrition and health

The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) was born in the 1960s amidst widespread concern of a Malthusian crisis looming in poor countries. In the last 40 years, the world has managed to feed its growing population (some too much and some too little) thanks to many initia...

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Autores principales: Grace, Delia, McDermott, John J.
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24899
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author Grace, Delia
McDermott, John J.
author_browse Grace, Delia
McDermott, John J.
author_facet Grace, Delia
McDermott, John J.
author_sort Grace, Delia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) was born in the 1960s amidst widespread concern of a Malthusian crisis looming in poor countries. In the last 40 years, the world has managed to feed its growing population (some too much and some too little) thanks to many initiatives and actors, not least international agricultural research. The last 4 decades have also seen concerns about agriculture widen from food quantity to food quality and safety, from farms to the whole value chain, from productivity to environmental impacts, and from profits to poverty and gender equity. This paper describes how, in response to changing demands, the CGIAR transited in 2010 from an informally managed, academically oriented system to a more structured model emphasizing impact, accountability and collaboration. As part of this change, a major new program was launched in 2012 on leveraging agriculture to improve human nutrition and health. Three of the program components focus on nutrition and one component focuses on human disease problems where agriculture contributes to the problem and potentially the solutions. The agriculture and health priorities have been identified as foodborne disease, zoonoses, and emerging diseases. Ecohealth/One Health provides an over-arching framework for this component and we describe the focus, activities, partnership strategy and impact pathway situated in an Ecohealth/One Health conceptual framework. We also cite examples from recently completed projects showing how CGIAR research could have a key role in improving the management of health risks that have their origin on farms and in food chains.
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spelling CGSpace248992020-10-27T09:13:14Z Agriculture for nutrition and health Grace, Delia McDermott, John J. health research zoonoses The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) was born in the 1960s amidst widespread concern of a Malthusian crisis looming in poor countries. In the last 40 years, the world has managed to feed its growing population (some too much and some too little) thanks to many initiatives and actors, not least international agricultural research. The last 4 decades have also seen concerns about agriculture widen from food quantity to food quality and safety, from farms to the whole value chain, from productivity to environmental impacts, and from profits to poverty and gender equity. This paper describes how, in response to changing demands, the CGIAR transited in 2010 from an informally managed, academically oriented system to a more structured model emphasizing impact, accountability and collaboration. As part of this change, a major new program was launched in 2012 on leveraging agriculture to improve human nutrition and health. Three of the program components focus on nutrition and one component focuses on human disease problems where agriculture contributes to the problem and potentially the solutions. The agriculture and health priorities have been identified as foodborne disease, zoonoses, and emerging diseases. Ecohealth/One Health provides an over-arching framework for this component and we describe the focus, activities, partnership strategy and impact pathway situated in an Ecohealth/One Health conceptual framework. We also cite examples from recently completed projects showing how CGIAR research could have a key role in improving the management of health risks that have their origin on farms and in food chains. 2012-10-15 2012-12-09T11:28:27Z 2012-12-09T11:28:27Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24899 en Open Access International Livestock Research Institute Grace, D. and McDermott, J. 2012. Agriculture for nutrition and health. Presented at the 2012 Ecohealth conference, Kunming, China, 15-18 October 2012. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle health
research
zoonoses
Grace, Delia
McDermott, John J.
Agriculture for nutrition and health
title Agriculture for nutrition and health
title_full Agriculture for nutrition and health
title_fullStr Agriculture for nutrition and health
title_full_unstemmed Agriculture for nutrition and health
title_short Agriculture for nutrition and health
title_sort agriculture for nutrition and health
topic health
research
zoonoses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24899
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