NUS so fast: the social and ecological implications of a rapidly developing indigenous food economy in the Cape Town area.

IF 5.1 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Sustainability Science Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-29 DOI:10.1007/s11625-024-01528-z
Jenny Willis, Bruno Losch, Laura M Pereira
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The modern global food system is highly unsustainable, shaped by industrialisation and corporate consolidation, with negative repercussions on the environment and biodiversity as well as human health. This paper looks at the burgeoning economy in neglected and underutilised species (NUS) in the Western Cape, South Africa, as a potential innovation that could make the local food system more socially and ecologically resilient. Although, at present, NUS are only marginally included in the local food system and policy discussions, NUS increasingly appear in the high-end food industry, driven by international gastronomic trends. These species hold potential as climate resilient, nutritionally dense, and socially and culturally significant foods in the region, but they also carry ecological and social risks. We critically examine the fledgling NUS economy in the Cape Town area to unpack the motivations and challenges associated with the potentially transformative inclusion of these foods into the local food system. We demonstrate that the main risks associated with NUS are negative ecological repercussions, privatisation of the NUS economy, and the reproduction and further entrenchment of unequal power and race dynamics in the region. To mitigate these risks and actualise the related benefits associated with NUS, engagement with the ecological, social, and political context of NUS needs to be significantly deepened. This is particularly true for those working in the high-end food industry, who appear to be driving the NUS economy, and will require education around sustainability and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), as well as a foregrounding awareness of power dynamics.

NUS so fast:开普敦地区快速发展的本土食品经济对社会和生态的影响。
在工业化和企业整合的影响下,现代全球粮食系统极不具有可持续性,对环境、生物多样性和人类健康造成了负面影响。本文探讨了南非西开普省被忽视和未充分利用物种(NUS)经济的蓬勃发展,认为这是一种潜在的创新,可使当地粮食系统在社会和生态方面更具复原力。尽管目前 NUS 在当地食品系统和政策讨论中的地位不高,但在国际美食趋势的推动下,NUS 越来越多地出现在高端食品行业中。这些物种具有作为气候适应性强、营养丰富、对该地区具有重要社会和文化意义的食品的潜力,但它们也具有生态和社会风险。我们对开普敦地区刚刚起步的 NUS 经济进行了批判性研究,以解读将这些食品纳入当地食品体系可能带来的变革所带来的动机和挑战。我们表明,与 NUS 相关的主要风险是对生态环境的负面影响、NUS 经济的私有化以及该地区不平等权力和种族动态的再现和进一步巩固。为了降低这些风险并实现与新国大相关的利益,需要大力深化对新国大生态、社会和政治背景的参与。这对于那些在高端食品行业工作的人来说尤为如此,因为他们似乎正在推动新加坡国立大学的经济发展,这就需要围绕可持续性和传统生态知识(TEK)开展教育,并强调对权力动态的认识。
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来源期刊
Sustainability Science
Sustainability Science 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
11.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
174
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The journal Sustainability Science offers insights into interactions within and between nature and the rest of human society, and the complex mechanisms that sustain both. The journal promotes science based predictions and impact assessments of global change, and seeks ways to ensure that such knowledge can be understood by society and be used to strengthen the resilience of global natural systems (such as ecosystems, ocean and atmospheric systems, nutrient cycles), social systems (economies, governments, industry) and human systems at the individual level (lifestyles, health, security, and human values).
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