Broadening the Definition of Food Security in the Asia-Pacific

(co-authored) Working Paper published by the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Japan

While food security is conventionally defined by four pillars—availability, access, utilisation, and
stability—this apolitical framing overlooks underlying economic and political processes shaping food insecurity and constraining the agency of food producers. In doing so, it also overlooks the structural threats to human security. Considering the complexity of climate change as a phenomenon, not including these dimensions presents an incomplete picture of multiple risks in the present and the future faced by populations and governments around the world.

To that end, this discussion paper calls for broadening the understanding of food security by integrating the dimensions of agency, sustainability, and resilience as they incorporate the power and politics constraining the agency of food producers, and link present trajectories with past legacies and visions for the future. It further explores whether existing frameworks in the Asia Pacific, a region experiencing immense environmental burdens1, includes them in some form or the other.

Next
Next

Mapping the Politics of Water and the Hidden Violence of the Legal Economy through the Small-scale Water Providers of Metro Manila