Ethics in Food Security and Worker Security: T.Yathurshan 2016/BST/108
Ethics in Food Security and Worker Security: T.Yathurshan 2016/BST/108
Ethics in Food Security and Worker Security: T.Yathurshan 2016/BST/108
T.YATHURSHAN
2016/BST/108
1. Ethics in food security and worker security
According to the FAO's official definition, food security has four elements
availability (of food),
access (to food),
utilisation (the quality and safety),
stability (of supply)
By the very definition food security should also be sustainable.this is
implicit in the definition words ‘at all times’. Food security is often linked
with food sovereignty or 'the right of peoples to define their own food
and agriculture; to protect and regulate domestic agricultural production
and trade in order to achieve sustainable development objectives; to
determine the extent to which they want to be self reliant. A widespread
view that has been adopted by the Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) is that a combination of food availability, economic and physical
access to food, food utilization (nutrition and uptake), and stability of
these three dimensions over time all need to be in play in order to ensure
food security
Food insecurity
Distribution is an important facet of food security because there may be
enough food for these starving populations elsewhere in the region or
world, but they do not have access to it in their community. This concern
does not address the economic element of food availability. If people
cannot afford to purchase food on a regular basis, or food markets have
been disrupted, then they still would be unlikely to attain access to food
even if it were redistributed. Additionally, while nutrients are a concern
that falls under food utilization, it too does not capture the full picture.
People must be able to prepare available food to retain nutrients and be
willing to eat it, which is as much a social and cultural issue as it is about
food nutrient content.
Ethical consideration in food security
1. present vs posterity
When approaching food security, either as a whole or through a
narrower subtopic, one is inevitably forced to take some sort of
stand on whether food security is to be conceived in the short term
or in the long term. One element that defines food security is the
notion that access and availability are not merely for the current
days or season ahead, but that it is dependable and reliable over
time. Much like trying to establish a clear definition for "food
security", there is a vagueness to the concept of long-term, as it
could simply be characterized as over the next couple of years or
over decades to come. Long-term food security could also be framed
over the span of an average person's life span, or it could reach many
generations or even infinitely into the future. Common usage
suggests an implicit assumption that we are considering a person's
life span. There may be difficulty in ensuring, or even
conceptualizing, how to prepare for food production, availability,
accessibility and adequate nutrition beyond this time-frame as social,
physical, economic, and demographic shifts could drastically change
even if food security for posterity is valued.
Reference:-
https://www.umt.edu/ethics/debating
%20science
%20program/odc/Biotechnology/Goals/foodsecurity.p
hp
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S22
11912415300158
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Teea_Kortetma
eki/publication/283449607_Food_security_and_ethics
_The_first_world_hunger/links/56442fc308aef646e6ca
6fa8/Food-security-and-ethics-The-first-world-
hunger.pdf?origin=publication_detail