Foro Global sobre Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición (Foro FSN)

The deeper layer of structural drivers fundamental to understanding inequity, including sociocultural, economic and political aspects are examined, as well as actions and policies to reduce inequalities that mirrors these layers of drivers.

To vehimently assert that there are structural dysfunction as to the way and manner food systems have been handled especially in time of crises and disruptions, the entire food community can design a more resilient food systems for efficient coordination with better and measurable output from past experiences with indicators that have been predetermined by monitoring and evaluating such designs in the past.

The Associated terms of references for future proofing these new mechanisms can be or are the root causes of the failures experienced and these are ascertained through procedural testing.

These scopes would of course invariably maximize every possible tools and demystify new improvements in science and innovation within the food systems cycle.

These identifiable structural approach can be cascades of the different layers of drivers, either in policy formulation, transboundary institutional hierarchy which can be decentralised into simpler and effective structures for social cultural and geopolitical co-benefits.