Knowledge networks to support youth engagement in sustainable food systems

Young people are on the front lines of transforming agriculture and food systems, coping with the social and economic impacts of COVID-19 as well as environmental and climate change effects which are likely to accelerate and intensify during their lifetimes. At the same time, young people across global contexts are increasingly emerging as visible agents of change in food systems, especially through networks that create, transform, and distribute food systems knowledge. This policy and practice review examines the role of youth as actors through food systems knowledge networks. Increasing youth participation in creating sustainable food systems for the future requires policies and practices that support food systems-related knowledge in two ways: democratizing formal education systems; and strengthening horizontal networks of grassroots research and innovation, including through traditional, ecological, local and community knowledge (TELCK). Food systems policies should be developed through dialogue with diverse knowledge systems, experiences, place-based needs, and aspirations of young people to maximize their participation in food systems policy development and evaluation.

ຂໍ້ເມູນ ແລະ ແຫຼ່ງທີ່ມາ

ຂໍ້ມູນເພີ່ມເຕີມ

ຊ່ອງຂໍ້ມູນ ມູນຄ່າ
ປະເພດຜະລິດຕະພັນຂອງອາລິເຊຍ ບໍ່ມີ
ຊື່ເລື່ອງ Knowledge networks to support youth engagement in sustainable food systems
ຄຳອະທິບາ Young people are on the front lines of transforming agriculture and food systems, coping with the social and economic impacts of COVID-19 as well as environmental and climate change effects which are likely to accelerate and intensify during their lifetimes. At the same time, young people across global contexts are increasingly emerging as visible agents of change in food systems, especially through networks that create, transform, and distribute food systems knowledge. This policy and practice review examines the role of youth as actors through food systems knowledge networks. Increasing youth participation in creating sustainable food systems for the future requires policies and practices that support food systems-related knowledge in two ways: democratizing formal education systems; and strengthening horizontal networks of grassroots research and innovation, including through traditional, ecological, local and community knowledge (TELCK). Food systems policies should be developed through dialogue with diverse knowledge systems, experiences, place-based needs, and aspirations of young people to maximize their participation in food systems policy development and evaluation.
ໝວດໝູ່ນິເວດກະສິກຳ
  • ການຮ່ວມມື
  • ທຶນ
  • ຄວາມຮູ້ ແລະ ຄຸນຄ່າ
ຄໍາສໍາຄັນດ້ານນິເວດວິທະຍາ
  • ການມີສ່ວນຮ່ວມຂອງຊຸມຊົນ
  • ການຜະລິດຄວາມຮູ້ຮ່ວມກັນ
  • ຄວາມຮູ້ທ້ອງຖິ່ນ
ອົງການຈັດຕັ້ງປະກອບສ່ວນ International Water Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka, Food and Agriculture Institute, University of the Fraser Valley, Abbotsford, BC, Canada, FAO, Rome, Italy, IUCN, Nairobi, Kenya, CGIAR, Nairobi, Kenya, Faculty of Land and Food Systems and Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
ຜູ້ຂຽນ Mariaelena Huambachano, Indika Arulingam, Evan Bowness, Anna Korzenszky, Catherine Mungai, Paola Termine4 and Hannah Wittman
ປີ 2022
ປະເພດຂອງເອກະສານ Scientific & Research
ພາສາ ພາສາອັງກິດ
ປະເທດ ທົ່ວໂລກ
ລະດັບບໍລິຫານ 1
ລະດັບບໍລິຫານ 2
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