What are the ingredients for food systems change towards sustainability? - Insights from the literature

Research output: Journal contributionsScientific review articlesResearch

Standard

What are the ingredients for food systems change towards sustainability? - Insights from the literature. / Weber, Hanna; Pöggel, Karoline; Eakin, Hallie et al.

In: Environmental Research Letters, Vol. 15, No. 11, 113001, 01.11.2020.

Research output: Journal contributionsScientific review articlesResearch

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{7d61816718ee43de926904794167b1b2,
title = "What are the ingredients for food systems change towards sustainability? - Insights from the literature",
abstract = "Many detrimental effects on the environment, economy, and society are associated with the structure and practices of food systems around the world. While there is increasing agreement on the need for substantive change in food systems towards sustainability, divergent perspectives exist on what the appropriate points of intervention and strategies to achieve such change are. Change in diets and nutrition, the importance of social food movements, and sustainable farming practices are all disparately featured in the literature; yet, there is little effort to compare and integrate these perspectives. This review offers a comprehensive overview of perspectives on food systems change towards sustainability. We discern where there is convergence and assess how the literature reflects emergent theory on sustainability transformation. We analyzed more than 200 peer-reviewed articles employing an approach that combines quantitative and qualitative analysis. First, we performed a semantic hierarchical cluster analysis of the full texts to identify thematic clusters representing different perspectives on sustainability transformations and transitions of food systems. Second, we conducted a qualitative text analysis for representative articles of each cluster to examine how deep changes in the food system are conceptualized. We identified five distinct approaches to food systems change that are currently discussed, i.e. Alternative food movements, Sustainable diets, Sustainable agriculture, Healthy and diverse societies, and Food as commons. Each approach provides a nuanced perspective on identified sustainability problems, envisioned sustainable food systems, and proposed actions to change food systems towards sustainability. The findings offer guidance for researchers and practitioners working on food systems change towards sustainability.",
keywords = "Sustainability Science, Transdisciplinary studies, mixed-method, systematic literature review, transformation, transition",
author = "Hanna Weber and Karoline P{\"o}ggel and Hallie Eakin and Daniel Fischer and Lang, {Daniel J.} and Henrik Wehrden and Arnim Wiek",
note = "The first two authors (HW and KP) have contributed equally to this work. This research was made possible within the graduate school 'Processes of Sustainability Transformation', which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of L{\"u}neburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). We also thank Lisa Gotzian for her continuous support with the statistical analysis. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.",
year = "2020",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1088/1748-9326/ab99fd",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
journal = "Environmental Research Letters",
issn = "1748-9318",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - What are the ingredients for food systems change towards sustainability? - Insights from the literature

AU - Weber, Hanna

AU - Pöggel, Karoline

AU - Eakin, Hallie

AU - Fischer, Daniel

AU - Lang, Daniel J.

AU - Wehrden, Henrik

AU - Wiek, Arnim

N1 - The first two authors (HW and KP) have contributed equally to this work. This research was made possible within the graduate school 'Processes of Sustainability Transformation', which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of Lüneburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). We also thank Lisa Gotzian for her continuous support with the statistical analysis. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.

PY - 2020/11/1

Y1 - 2020/11/1

N2 - Many detrimental effects on the environment, economy, and society are associated with the structure and practices of food systems around the world. While there is increasing agreement on the need for substantive change in food systems towards sustainability, divergent perspectives exist on what the appropriate points of intervention and strategies to achieve such change are. Change in diets and nutrition, the importance of social food movements, and sustainable farming practices are all disparately featured in the literature; yet, there is little effort to compare and integrate these perspectives. This review offers a comprehensive overview of perspectives on food systems change towards sustainability. We discern where there is convergence and assess how the literature reflects emergent theory on sustainability transformation. We analyzed more than 200 peer-reviewed articles employing an approach that combines quantitative and qualitative analysis. First, we performed a semantic hierarchical cluster analysis of the full texts to identify thematic clusters representing different perspectives on sustainability transformations and transitions of food systems. Second, we conducted a qualitative text analysis for representative articles of each cluster to examine how deep changes in the food system are conceptualized. We identified five distinct approaches to food systems change that are currently discussed, i.e. Alternative food movements, Sustainable diets, Sustainable agriculture, Healthy and diverse societies, and Food as commons. Each approach provides a nuanced perspective on identified sustainability problems, envisioned sustainable food systems, and proposed actions to change food systems towards sustainability. The findings offer guidance for researchers and practitioners working on food systems change towards sustainability.

AB - Many detrimental effects on the environment, economy, and society are associated with the structure and practices of food systems around the world. While there is increasing agreement on the need for substantive change in food systems towards sustainability, divergent perspectives exist on what the appropriate points of intervention and strategies to achieve such change are. Change in diets and nutrition, the importance of social food movements, and sustainable farming practices are all disparately featured in the literature; yet, there is little effort to compare and integrate these perspectives. This review offers a comprehensive overview of perspectives on food systems change towards sustainability. We discern where there is convergence and assess how the literature reflects emergent theory on sustainability transformation. We analyzed more than 200 peer-reviewed articles employing an approach that combines quantitative and qualitative analysis. First, we performed a semantic hierarchical cluster analysis of the full texts to identify thematic clusters representing different perspectives on sustainability transformations and transitions of food systems. Second, we conducted a qualitative text analysis for representative articles of each cluster to examine how deep changes in the food system are conceptualized. We identified five distinct approaches to food systems change that are currently discussed, i.e. Alternative food movements, Sustainable diets, Sustainable agriculture, Healthy and diverse societies, and Food as commons. Each approach provides a nuanced perspective on identified sustainability problems, envisioned sustainable food systems, and proposed actions to change food systems towards sustainability. The findings offer guidance for researchers and practitioners working on food systems change towards sustainability.

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Transdisciplinary studies

KW - mixed-method

KW - systematic literature review

KW - transformation

KW - transition

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85088932018&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/5d3fd7c3-9d54-341d-9a0b-0a300b43c5bd/

U2 - 10.1088/1748-9326/ab99fd

DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/ab99fd

M3 - Scientific review articles

VL - 15

JO - Environmental Research Letters

JF - Environmental Research Letters

SN - 1748-9318

IS - 11

M1 - 113001

ER -

Documents

DOI