منصة المعارف عن الزراعة الإيكولوجية

Culture and food traditions: by supporting healthy, diversified and culturally appropriate diets, agroecology contributes to food security and nutrition while maintaining the health of ecosystems

Agriculture and food are core components of human heritage. Hence, culture and food traditions play a central role in society and in shaping human behaviour. However, in many instances, our current food systems have created a disconnection between food habits and culture. This disconnection has contributed to a situation where hunger and obesity exist side by side, in a world that produces enough food to feed its entire population.

Almost 800 million people worldwide are chronically hungry and 2 billion suffer micronutrient deficiencies. Meanwhile, there has been a rampant rise in obesity and diet-related diseases; 1.9 billion people are overweight or obese and non-communicable diseases (cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes) are the number one cause of global mortality. To address the imbalances in our food systems and move towards a zero hunger world, increasing production alone is not sufficient.

Agroecology plays an important role in re-balancing tradition and modern food habits, bringing them together in a harmonious way that promotes healthy food production and consumption, supporting the right to adequate food. In this way, agroecology seeks to cultivate a healthy relationship between people and food.

Cultural identity and sense of place are often closely tied to landscapes and food systems. As people and ecosystems have evolved together, cultural practices and indigenous and traditional knowledge offer a wealth of experience that can inspire agroecological solutions. For example, India is home to an estimated 50,000 indigenous varieties of rice – bred over centuries for their specific taste, nutrition and pest-resistance properties, and their adaptability to a range of conditions. Culinary traditions are built around these different varieties, making use of their different properties. Taking this accumulated body of traditional knowledge as a guide, agroecology can help realise the potential of territories to sustain their peoples.

Database

Visual narratives using the 10 Elements of Agroecology can guide the holistic visioning needed to better understand transformative change and plausible transitions towards sustainable agriculture and food systems. By sharing similar underlying storylines, assumptions, and responses to drivers of change, visual narratives may foster the convergence of transitions into typologies that...
وثيقة عمل
2023
Agroecology Newsletter of April 2022
الرسالة الإخبارية
2022
A developing new bachelor degree on Agroecology and Food Systems, as well as MSc and PhD programs. It will include international research, as well as territory-linked research with our closer social and natural environment, always looking at food from alternative food systems perspective more grounded into transformative groups (eg. food...
Spain
التعلّم
The booklet, edited by the United Federation of Farmers and Livestock Associations (FUGEA), presents a series of practices and techniques to reinforce farmer's autonomy and the environmental, social and economic sustainability of the farms. The booklet covers eight main topics: food systems' autonomy, livestock, diversification, soil convervation, agroforestry, water protection, energy...
France
صحيفة وقائع
2017
The Avaclim project (2020-2022) is funded by the Global Environment Facility and the French Facility for Global Environment (FFEM) and is coordinated by CARI. The project aims to create the necessary conditions for the deployment of agroecology in arid areas. It seeks to enable stakeholders to develop, apply, and sustain agroecological approaches in drylands in...
Brazil - Burkina Faso - Ethiopia - India - Morocco - Senegal - South Africa
مشروع
2020