Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet

During the past decade, the concept of sustainability has been added to the factors involved in food security. This has led to a more comprehensive and holistic approach to sustainable food systems which considers drivers—environment, geopolitics, demographics, policy regulations, socio-cu...

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Main Author: Elliot M Berry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Nutrients
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/9/2229
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spelling doaj-7daff420aca54c4798a8c1568ecefa7c2020-11-25T01:30:59ZengMDPI AGNutrients2072-66432019-09-01119222910.3390/nu11092229nu11092229Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean DietElliot M Berry0Braun School of Public Health, Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem 9222507, IsraelDuring the past decade, the concept of sustainability has been added to the factors involved in food security. This has led to a more comprehensive and holistic approach to sustainable food systems which considers drivers—environment, geopolitics, demographics, policy regulations, socio-cultural-economic factors, science and technology and infrastructure. The outcomes, similarly, involve many dimensions—environment, food security and nutrition, health and socio-cultural-economic aspects. This article discusses the Mediterranean diet in the context of sustainable food systems and shows (as in all parts of the world) that there is food insecurity in every country as monitored by the Global Nutrition Index. Three recent, major reports published in 2019 suggest what measures need to be taken to improve sustainable food systems. All environmental analyses agree on the need to promote more plant-based diets—achieved practically by using “more forks than knives”. The Mediterranean Diet pattern is a case study for a sustainable diet. It has the best scientific evidence for being healthy, together with economic and socio-cultural benefits. A major challenge is that it is not consumed by the majority of the population in the Mediterranean region, and any solution must involve equity—the socially just allocation of resources. The task now is implementation with multi-stakeholder involvement, in the knowledge that “a well fed nation is a healthy nation is a sustainable and productive nation”.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/9/2229sustainable food systemsMediterranean DietGlobal Nutrition Index
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elliot M Berry
spellingShingle Elliot M Berry
Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
Nutrients
sustainable food systems
Mediterranean Diet
Global Nutrition Index
author_facet Elliot M Berry
author_sort Elliot M Berry
title Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
title_short Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
title_full Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
title_fullStr Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Food Systems and the Mediterranean Diet
title_sort sustainable food systems and the mediterranean diet
publisher MDPI AG
series Nutrients
issn 2072-6643
publishDate 2019-09-01
description During the past decade, the concept of sustainability has been added to the factors involved in food security. This has led to a more comprehensive and holistic approach to sustainable food systems which considers drivers—environment, geopolitics, demographics, policy regulations, socio-cultural-economic factors, science and technology and infrastructure. The outcomes, similarly, involve many dimensions—environment, food security and nutrition, health and socio-cultural-economic aspects. This article discusses the Mediterranean diet in the context of sustainable food systems and shows (as in all parts of the world) that there is food insecurity in every country as monitored by the Global Nutrition Index. Three recent, major reports published in 2019 suggest what measures need to be taken to improve sustainable food systems. All environmental analyses agree on the need to promote more plant-based diets—achieved practically by using “more forks than knives”. The Mediterranean Diet pattern is a case study for a sustainable diet. It has the best scientific evidence for being healthy, together with economic and socio-cultural benefits. A major challenge is that it is not consumed by the majority of the population in the Mediterranean region, and any solution must involve equity—the socially just allocation of resources. The task now is implementation with multi-stakeholder involvement, in the knowledge that “a well fed nation is a healthy nation is a sustainable and productive nation”.
topic sustainable food systems
Mediterranean Diet
Global Nutrition Index
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/9/2229
work_keys_str_mv AT elliotmberry sustainablefoodsystemsandthemediterraneandiet
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