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The State of Food Systems Worldwide: Counting Down to 2030

Author

Listed:
  • Kate Schneider

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Jessica Fanzo

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Lawrence Haddad

    (Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition)

  • Mario Herrero

    (Cornell University)

  • Jose Rosero Moncayo

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Anna Herforth

    (Harvard University)

  • Roseline Reman

    (Alliance of CIAT-Bioversity)

  • Alejandro Guarin

    (International Institute for Environment & Development)

  • Danielle Resnick

    (Brookings Institution)

  • Namukolo Covic

    (International Livestock Research Institute)

  • Christophe B'en'e

    (Alliance of CIAT-Bioversity
    Wageningen Economic Research Group)

  • Andrea Cattaneo

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Nancy Aburto

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Ramya Ambikapathi

    (Cornell University)

  • Destan Aytekin

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Simon Barquera

    (Instituto Nacional de Salud P\'ublica)

  • Jane Battersby-Lennard

    (University of Cape Town)

  • Ty Beal

    (Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition)

  • Paulina Bizzoto Molina

    (European Centre for Development Policy Management)

  • Carlo Cafiero

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Christine Campeau

    (CARE)

  • Patrick Caron

    (University of Montpellier, Cirad, ART-DEV)

  • Piero Conforti

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Kerstin Damerau

    (Cornell University)

  • Michael DiGirolamo

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Fabrice DeClerck

    (EAT Forum)

  • Deviana Dewi

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Ismahane Elouafi

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Carola Fabi

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Pat Foley

    (United Nations World Food Programme)

  • Ty Frazier

    (Oakridge National Laboratory)

  • Jessica Gephart

    (American University)

  • Christopher Golden

    (Harvard University)

  • Carlos Gonzalez Fischer

    (Cornell University)

  • Sheryl Hendriks

    (University of Greenwich)

  • Maddalena Honorati

    (World Bank)

  • Jikun Huang

    (Peking University)

  • Gina Kennedy

    (Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition)

  • Amos Laar

    (University of Ghana)

  • Rattan Lal

    (Ohio State University)

  • Preetmoninder Lidder

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Brent Loken

    (World Wildlife Fund)

  • Quinn Marshall

    (International Food Policy Research Institute)

  • Yuta Masuda

    (Vulcan)

  • Rebecca McLaren

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Lais Miachon

    (Johns Hopkins University)

  • Hern'an Mu~noz

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Stella Nordhagen

    (Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition)

  • Naina Qayyum

    (Tufts University)

  • Michaela Saisana

    (Joint Research Centre)

  • Diana Suhardiman

    (KIT Royal Tropical Institute)

  • Rashid Sumaila

    (University of British Columbia)

  • Maximo Torrero Cullen

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Francesco Tubiello

    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

  • Jose-Luis Vivero-Pol

    (United Nations World Food Programme)

  • Patrick Webb

    (Tufts University)

  • Keith Wiebe

    (International Food Policy Research Institute)

Abstract

Transforming food systems is essential to bring about a healthier, equitable, sustainable, and resilient future, including achieving global development and sustainability goals. To date, no comprehensive framework exists to track food systems transformation and their contributions to global goals. In 2021, the Food Systems Countdown to 2030 Initiative (FSCI) articulated an architecture to monitor food systems across five themes: 1 diets, nutrition, and health; 2 environment, natural resources, and production; 3 livelihoods, poverty, and equity; 4 governance; and 5 resilience and sustainability. Each theme comprises three-to-five indicator domains. This paper builds on that architecture, presenting the inclusive, consultative process used to select indicators and an application of the indicator framework using the latest available data, constructing the first global food systems baseline to track transformation. While data are available to cover most themes and domains, critical indicator gaps exist such as off-farm livelihoods, food loss and waste, and governance. Baseline results demonstrate every region or country can claim positive outcomes in some parts of food systems, but none are optimal across all domains, and some indicators are independent of national income. These results underscore the need for dedicated monitoring and transformation agendas specific to food systems. Tracking these indicators to 2030 and beyond will allow for data-driven food systems governance at all scales and increase accountability for urgently needed progress toward achieving global goals.

Suggested Citation

  • Kate Schneider & Jessica Fanzo & Lawrence Haddad & Mario Herrero & Jose Rosero Moncayo & Anna Herforth & Roseline Reman & Alejandro Guarin & Danielle Resnick & Namukolo Covic & Christophe B'en'e & And, 2023. "The State of Food Systems Worldwide: Counting Down to 2030," Papers 2303.13669, arXiv.org, revised Mar 2023.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2303.13669
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2303.13669
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    Cited by:

    1. Vivica I. Kraak & Kim L. Niewolny, 2024. "A Scoping Review of Food Systems Governance Frameworks and Models to Develop a Typology for Social Change Movements to Transform Food Systems for People and Planetary Health," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 16(4), pages 1-22, February.

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