Dr Graeme MacRae1, Professor Thomas Reuter2, Associate Professor John McCarthy3, Professor Yunita Winarto4, Dr. Sue Walker5, Dr. Rhino Ariefiansyah6, Dr. Adlinanur Prihandiani7, Dr Subejo Subejo8
1Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand, 2University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia, 3Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, 4University of Indonesia , Jakarta, Indonesia, 5University of Free State, Pretoria, South Africa, 6University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia, 7University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia, 8Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Chair: Dr Graeme Macrae
Overview:
World food security is likely to become more critical in the future, with hunger on the rise again. Asia is where the world’s futures will manifest most rapidly, clearly and critically.
While much of the region’s food is produced by small farmers for subsistence and local markets, industrialisation and commercialisation of food production is increasingly rapidly. Multinational food corporations are penetrating deeply into national and local food systems across Asia. Local economies, ecologies and communities are being transformed by these changes.
Governments across Asia are concerned about food security and trying to anticipate the future. But they are torn three ways – between deeply embedded traditions and ideologies of self-sufficiency; global pressures for bio-technical innovations to boost production and market-led approaches to boost productivity and food sector growth; and popular movements for food sovereignty and food justice grounded in local communities, ecologies, revived traditional methods and internationally inspired organic and agro-ecological production and distributions systems. But this dominant focus on eco/bio/technical and economic dimensions of food security obscures the ongoing social and cultural embedment of food.
This panel will explore how Food Futures across Asia play out in diverse ways between these rapidly changing forces and processes.