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New research describes food systems designed not by the logic of growth such as efficiency and extraction, but by principles of sufficiency, regeneration, distribution, commons, and care. It argues that food systems can instead be the foundation of healthy communities, ecologies and economies.
"For this agenda-setting article, we've reviewed the vast experience of diverse farmers, food cooperatives, home gardeners, alternative retailers, and other endeavors to re-claim what sustainability for food systems means in high and low-income nations," the authors say.
Growth paradigm
The authors call for policymakers, researchers and community groups worldwide to rethink their approach to developing new solutions beyond the current "growth paradigm."
"We have seen what food systems designed to achieve relentless economic growth and profit maximization do to the environment, farming communities, and our health, and it's not good," says Dr. Steven McGreevy, an assistant professor of institutional urban sustainability studies at the University of Twente.
The current system is exploitative of humans and animals, ecologically rapacious, hooked on fossil fuels, and controlled by a small number of multi-national corporations from food to fork, this system produces massive quantities of the wrong foods at incredible social, ecological and economic costs. With food crises again looming on the near horizon, a strategy to tweak and maintain the current growth-driven food system is highly questionable.
Post-growth food system
"Fortunately, there are countless examples from around the world of post-growth agrifood system elements in action. We need to support these models where they exist, and rediscover, transfer, or further develop them where appropriate," says McGreevy.
The authors identified post-growth agrifood system endeavors already in action around the world.
New research agenda
According to the study published in Nature Sustainability, the conventional wisdom of mainstream sustainability science–including its underlying logic of economic growth—is fixated on narrow solution space: increasing production efficiency, high-tech innovation and individual behavior change.
To break free of these intellectual constraints, the redesign of the global agrifood system should be supported by a coordinated education and a new research agenda that challenges conventional wisdom and focuses on understanding and developing diverse solutions outside of the growth paradigm.