Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?

Every year over 10 million people die of hunger and hunger related diseases. Nearly six million of these are children under the age of five; that is one child’s death approximately every six seconds. Understanding how this still occurs amid the ever increasing social enlightenment of the 21st centur...

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Main Author: Mark Gibson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-12-01
Series:Foods
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/1/1/18
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spelling doaj-20d727af6f22404f9a6f92d7185a45bf2020-11-24T23:09:16ZengMDPI AGFoods2304-81582012-12-0111182710.3390/foods1010018Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?Mark GibsonEvery year over 10 million people die of hunger and hunger related diseases. Nearly six million of these are children under the age of five; that is one child’s death approximately every six seconds. Understanding how this still occurs amid the ever increasing social enlightenment of the 21st century—and under the auspices of a vigilant global developmental community—is one of the key challenges of our time. The science of food security aims to address such concerns. By understanding the multiplicity of the phenomenon, practitioners of global multilateral hegemony seek to shape appropriate policy to address these issues. The difficulty however is that the phenomenon is increasingly wrapped up inside an ever growing bundle of societal aspirations including inter-alia under-nutrition, poverty, sustainability, free trade, national self sufficiency, reducing female subjugation and so on. Any solutions therefore, involve fully understanding just what is indeed included, implied, understood or excluded within the food security catchall. Indeed, until such time as consensus can be found that adequately binds the phenomenon within a fixed delineated concept, current efforts to address the multitude of often divergent threads only serves to dilute efforts and confound attempts to once-and-for-all bring these unacceptable figures under control.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/1/1/18food securityfaminehungermalnutritionunder-nutritionpovertysustainabilityfood production
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Gibson
spellingShingle Mark Gibson
Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
Foods
food security
famine
hunger
malnutrition
under-nutrition
poverty
sustainability
food production
author_facet Mark Gibson
author_sort Mark Gibson
title Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
title_short Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
title_full Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
title_fullStr Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
title_full_unstemmed Food Security—A Commentary: What Is It and Why Is It So Complicated?
title_sort food security—a commentary: what is it and why is it so complicated?
publisher MDPI AG
series Foods
issn 2304-8158
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Every year over 10 million people die of hunger and hunger related diseases. Nearly six million of these are children under the age of five; that is one child’s death approximately every six seconds. Understanding how this still occurs amid the ever increasing social enlightenment of the 21st century—and under the auspices of a vigilant global developmental community—is one of the key challenges of our time. The science of food security aims to address such concerns. By understanding the multiplicity of the phenomenon, practitioners of global multilateral hegemony seek to shape appropriate policy to address these issues. The difficulty however is that the phenomenon is increasingly wrapped up inside an ever growing bundle of societal aspirations including inter-alia under-nutrition, poverty, sustainability, free trade, national self sufficiency, reducing female subjugation and so on. Any solutions therefore, involve fully understanding just what is indeed included, implied, understood or excluded within the food security catchall. Indeed, until such time as consensus can be found that adequately binds the phenomenon within a fixed delineated concept, current efforts to address the multitude of often divergent threads only serves to dilute efforts and confound attempts to once-and-for-all bring these unacceptable figures under control.
topic food security
famine
hunger
malnutrition
under-nutrition
poverty
sustainability
food production
url http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/1/1/18
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