Datum
2021-06-29Schlagwort
300 Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie MentalitätParadigmaVereinte Nationen: Agenda 2030 für nachhaltige EntwicklungTransformationRückmeldungSynergieNachhaltigkeitErnährungMetadata
Zur Langanzeige
Aufsatz
Sustainable Development Goal Drivers in Food Systems
Zusammenfassung
Interacting driving forces in food systems, resulting in cumulative driver effects and synergies, induce non-linear processes in multiple directions. This paper critically reviews the discourse on driving forces in food systems and argues that mindset is the primary predictor for food system outcomes. In the epoch of sustainable development goals (SDGs) and the Anthropocene, mindset matters more than ever. Transformative narratives are beginning to transcend the dominant social paradigm, which is still driving the food system's overall trajectory. The psychosocial portrayal of the systemic mindset found in organic food systems presented in this paper “flips the script” and hypothesizes that worldview and paradigm have the most causal linkages with unsustainable driver synergies and reversely the biggest leverage on the mitigation thereof. Borrowing from ecological economics discourses, the paper sharpens the driver definition by applying the DPSIR analytical tool as a modified diagnostic framework and modeling approach for food systems. This research sheds new light on the nature of drivers of change, which are often portrayed as almighty and inevitable trends shaping food systems. Instead, it is proposed that drivers emerge from the actors' mindset, affecting food system behavior in a non-linear way. Mindset drives reinforcing feedback loops, resulting in vicious and virtuous cycles. These driver motives manifest in subsystems and continue to drive their interaction across food system elements. Mindset acts as an encapsulated input of food systems, all the while responding to feedback and releasing new drivers. A transformation framework along leverage points of the food system is presented that features the concept of SDG drivers.
Zitierform
In: Frontiers in sustainable food systems Volume 5 (2021-06-29) eissn:2571-581XFörderhinweis
Gefördert durch den Publikationsfonds der Universität KasselZitieren
@article{doi:10.17170/kobra-202107294432,
author={Kretschmer, Sebastian and Kahl, Johannes},
title={Sustainable Development Goal Drivers in Food Systems},
journal={Frontiers in sustainable food systems},
year={2021}
}
0500 Oax 0501 Text $btxt$2rdacontent 0502 Computermedien $bc$2rdacarrier 1100 2021$n2021 1500 1/eng 2050 ##0##http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/13062 3000 Kretschmer, Sebastian 3010 Kahl, Johannes 4000 Sustainable Development Goal Drivers in Food Systems / Kretschmer, Sebastian 4030 4060 Online-Ressource 4085 ##0##=u http://nbn-resolving.de/http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/13062=x R 4204 \$dAufsatz 4170 5550 {{Mentalität}} 5550 {{Paradigma}} 5550 {{Vereinte Nationen: Agenda 2030 für nachhaltige Entwicklung}} 5550 {{Transformation}} 5550 {{Rückmeldung}} 5550 {{Synergie}} 5550 {{Nachhaltigkeit}} 5550 {{Ernährung}} 7136 ##0##http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/13062
2021-08-02T10:02:54Z 2021-08-02T10:02:54Z 2021-06-29 doi:10.17170/kobra-202107294432 http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/13062 Gefördert durch den Publikationsfonds der Universität Kassel eng Namensnennung 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ mindset paradigms drivers SDGs transformation feedback synergies emerging properties 300 Sustainable Development Goal Drivers in Food Systems Aufsatz Interacting driving forces in food systems, resulting in cumulative driver effects and synergies, induce non-linear processes in multiple directions. This paper critically reviews the discourse on driving forces in food systems and argues that mindset is the primary predictor for food system outcomes. In the epoch of sustainable development goals (SDGs) and the Anthropocene, mindset matters more than ever. Transformative narratives are beginning to transcend the dominant social paradigm, which is still driving the food system's overall trajectory. The psychosocial portrayal of the systemic mindset found in organic food systems presented in this paper “flips the script” and hypothesizes that worldview and paradigm have the most causal linkages with unsustainable driver synergies and reversely the biggest leverage on the mitigation thereof. Borrowing from ecological economics discourses, the paper sharpens the driver definition by applying the DPSIR analytical tool as a modified diagnostic framework and modeling approach for food systems. This research sheds new light on the nature of drivers of change, which are often portrayed as almighty and inevitable trends shaping food systems. Instead, it is proposed that drivers emerge from the actors' mindset, affecting food system behavior in a non-linear way. Mindset drives reinforcing feedback loops, resulting in vicious and virtuous cycles. These driver motives manifest in subsystems and continue to drive their interaction across food system elements. Mindset acts as an encapsulated input of food systems, all the while responding to feedback and releasing new drivers. A transformation framework along leverage points of the food system is presented that features the concept of SDG drivers. open access Kretschmer, Sebastian Kahl, Johannes doi:10.3389/fsufs.2021.536620 Mentalität Paradigma Vereinte Nationen: Agenda 2030 für nachhaltige Entwicklung Transformation Rückmeldung Synergie Nachhaltigkeit Ernährung publishedVersion eissn:2571-581X Frontiers in sustainable food systems Volume 5 false 536620
Die folgenden Lizenzbestimmungen sind mit dieser Ressource verbunden: