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Visioning a Food System for Equitable Transition Towards Sustainable Diets

Overview
Journal Sustainability
Publisher MDPI
Date 2023 Sep 11
PMID 37693306
Authors
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Abstract

The Global Goals to end hunger requires interpretation of problems, and change across multiple domains. We facilitated a workshop aimed at understanding how stakeholders problematise sustainable diet transition (SDT) among a previously-marginalised social group. Using the systems thinking approach, three sub-systems, access to dietary diversity, sustainable beneficiation of natural capital, and 'food choice for well-being', highlighted the main forces governing the current context, and future interventions. Moreover, when viewed as co-evolving processes within the multi-level perspective, our identified microlevel leverage points - multi-faceted literacy, youth empowerment, deliberative policy-making, promotion of sustainable diet aspirations - can be linked and developed through existing national macrolevel strategies. Thus, by reconsidering knowledge use in the pursuit sustainability, transformational SDT can streamline multiple outcomes to restructure socio-technical sectors, reconnect people to nature-based solutions and, support legitimate aspirations. The approach could be applied in countries having complex socio-political legacy and to bridge the local-global goals coherently.

Citing Articles

The Determinants of Market Participation and Its Effect on Food Security of the Rural Smallholder Farmers in Limpopo and Mpumalanga Provinces, South Africa.

Hlatshwayo S, Ojo T, Modi A, Mabhaudhi T, Slotow R, Ngidi M Agriculture (Basel). 2023; 12(7):1072.

PMID: 37701244 PMC: 7615078. DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12071072.

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