ABSTRACT

This book provides a critical assessment of the contemporary global food system in light of the heightening food crisis, as evidence of its failure to achieve food security for the world's population. A key aspect of this failure is identified in the neoliberal strategies which emphasize industrial efficiencies, commodity production and free trade-ideologies that underlie agricultural and food policies in what are frequently referred to as 'developed countries'.

The book examines both the contradictions in the global food system as well as the implications of existing ideologies of production associated with commodity industrial agriculture using evidence from relevant international case studies. The book's first section presents the context of the food crisis with contributions from leading international academics and food policy activists, including climate scientists, ecologists and social scientists. These contributions identify current contradictions in policy and practice that impede solutions to the food crisis. Set within this context, the second section assesses current conditions in the global food system, including economic viability, sustainability and productivity. Case study analyses of regions exposed to neoliberal policy at the production end of the system provide insights into both current challenges to feeding the world, as well as alternative strategies for creating a more just and moral food system.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Shocking the global food system

part |113 pages

The contradictions of the ‘feed the world' ideology

chapter |13 pages

Agriculture and food systems

Our current challenge

chapter |16 pages

Let us eat cake?

Historically reframing the problem of world hunger and its purported solutions

chapter |14 pages

Trading into hunger? Trading out of hunger?

International food trade and the debate on food security

chapter |15 pages

The right to food

A right for everyone

chapter |16 pages

Plentiful food?

Nutritious food?

part |105 pages

The condition of neoliberal agriculture

chapter |21 pages

Negotiating organic, fair and ethical trade

Lessons from smallholders in Uganda and Kenya

chapter |16 pages

Food for thought?

Linking urban agriculture and local food production for food security and development in the South Pacific

chapter |15 pages

Conclusions

Towards a more just and flexible global food system