Ecology and human nutrition

Adequate nutrition lies at the heart of the fight against hunger and poverty (Sanchez et al. 2005). Great strides in reducing hunger through increases in agricultural productivity have been made worldwide; however, more than 900 million of people remain chronically underfed, i.e. do not have access...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Remans, R., Fanzo, J.C., Palm, Cheryl A., DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2012
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34616
_version_ 1855515099430649856
author Remans, R.
Fanzo, J.C.
Palm, Cheryl A.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
author_browse DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Fanzo, J.C.
Palm, Cheryl A.
Remans, R.
author_facet Remans, R.
Fanzo, J.C.
Palm, Cheryl A.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
author_sort Remans, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Adequate nutrition lies at the heart of the fight against hunger and poverty (Sanchez et al. 2005). Great strides in reducing hunger through increases in agricultural productivity have been made worldwide; however, more than 900 million of people remain chronically underfed, i.e. do not have access to continuously meet dietary requirements (FAO 2008). It has long been known that malnutrition undermines economic growth and perpetuates poverty (World Bank 2006). Healthy individuals contribute to higher individual and country productivity, lower health care costs, and greater economic output by improving physical work capacity, cognitive development, school performance, and health (Grosse and Roy 2008). Unrelenting malnutrition is contributing not only to widespread failure to halve poverty and hunger, the first of the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDG), but if not appropriately eradicated, many of the other MDGs such as reducing maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS, universal education, and gender equity will be difficult to achieve (World Bank 2006). Yet the international community and most governments in developing countries continue to struggle in tackling malnutrition in all its complexity.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace34616
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateRange 2012
publishDateSort 2012
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace346162025-12-08T10:29:22Z Ecology and human nutrition Remans, R. Fanzo, J.C. Palm, Cheryl A. DeClerck, Fabrice A.J. Adequate nutrition lies at the heart of the fight against hunger and poverty (Sanchez et al. 2005). Great strides in reducing hunger through increases in agricultural productivity have been made worldwide; however, more than 900 million of people remain chronically underfed, i.e. do not have access to continuously meet dietary requirements (FAO 2008). It has long been known that malnutrition undermines economic growth and perpetuates poverty (World Bank 2006). Healthy individuals contribute to higher individual and country productivity, lower health care costs, and greater economic output by improving physical work capacity, cognitive development, school performance, and health (Grosse and Roy 2008). Unrelenting malnutrition is contributing not only to widespread failure to halve poverty and hunger, the first of the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDG), but if not appropriately eradicated, many of the other MDGs such as reducing maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS, universal education, and gender equity will be difficult to achieve (World Bank 2006). Yet the international community and most governments in developing countries continue to struggle in tackling malnutrition in all its complexity. 2012 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34616 en Springer Remans, R.; Fanzo, J.; Palm, C.A.; DeClerck, F. (2012). Ecology and human nutrition. In Integrating ecology and poverty reduction. The application of ecology in development solutions. (Ingram, J.C.; De Clerck, F.; Rumbaitis del Rio, C. (eds.)). Springer p. 53-75 ISBN:978-1-4614-0185-8
spellingShingle Remans, R.
Fanzo, J.C.
Palm, Cheryl A.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Ecology and human nutrition
title Ecology and human nutrition
title_full Ecology and human nutrition
title_fullStr Ecology and human nutrition
title_full_unstemmed Ecology and human nutrition
title_short Ecology and human nutrition
title_sort ecology and human nutrition
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34616
work_keys_str_mv AT remansr ecologyandhumannutrition
AT fanzojc ecologyandhumannutrition
AT palmcheryla ecologyandhumannutrition
AT declerckfabriceaj ecologyandhumannutrition