加勒比地区的粮食安全挑战和选择:范围审查的见解

Elham Mohammadi, Simron Jit Singh, Cameron McCordic, Jeremy Pittman
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引用次数: 7

摘要

加勒比地区仍然容易受到日益频繁的自然灾害、不断增加的国际债务、向外移民、快速城市化以及为满足基本需求而大量进口的影响。这些小岛屿国家的粮食和营养不安全状况依然存在,约67.5%的人口生活在中度或重度粮食不安全中。为实现第二个可持续发展目标(SDG2或零饥饿)所包含的目标所需的政策调整仍处于初级阶段。这项研究通过范围界定审查和专家访谈,对加勒比粮食政策和做法的现状进行了严格和最新的分析,以回答“哪些制约因素和推动者影响小岛屿国家实现零饥饿目标的能力?”。乔安娜·布里格斯研究所(JBI)根据相关人群、概念和背景(PCC)方法进行范围界定审查。通过范围界定审查确定了五个主要挑战和障碍:(i)岛屿地理,(ii)治理缺陷,和(iii)体制限制,再加上(iv)合作障碍,和(v)外部强加的障碍(包括环境和金融冲击)。为了应对这些挑战,SDG2本地化已认识到协同联系和限制性连接。结论是,粮食安全的三个方面(利用、机构和可持续性)主要被忽视,需要特别关注和采取行动。通过确定衔接机构并让各种行为者参与支持地方、国家和区域政策行为者之间的共享规则制定、权力、冲突管理和知识共享,建议将多中心治理体系作为帮助岛屿实现粮食安全的合适机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Food Security Challenges and Options in the Caribbean: Insights from a Scoping Review

The Caribbean region remains susceptible to an increasing frequency of natural disasters, rising international debt, out-migration, rapid urbanization, and high imports to meet basic needs. Food and nutrition insecurity persists in these small island states, with around 67.5% of the population living in moderate or severe food insecurity. Policy adjustments required to address the targets subsumed by the second sustainable development goal (SDG2 or Zero Hunger) are still at an infant stage. This research offers rigorous and up-to-date analyzes of the current status of Caribbean food policies and practices through a scoping review and expert interviews to answer the question, “What constraints and enablers impact the ability of small island states to achieve the Zero Hunger goal?”. A scoping review is performed following the relevant population, concept, and context (PCC) methodology by the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI). Five major challenges and barriers are identified through the scoping review: (i) island geography, (ii) governance deficiencies, and (iii) institutional constraints, compounded by (iv) collaboration barriers, and (v) externally imposed impediments (including environmental and financial shocks). To address these challenges, synergistic linkages and restrictive connections have been recognized for SDG2 localization. It was concluded that three dimensions of food security (utilization, agency, and sustainability) are mainly overlooked, necessitating special attention and action. By identifying bridging institutions and engaging various actors in supporting shared rulemaking, power, conflict management, and knowledge-sharing among local, national, and regional policy actors, a polycentric governance system is recommended as a suitable mechanism to help islands move towards food security.

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