The Wheel of Life Food, Climate, Human Rights, and the Economy
The links between climate change and industrial agriculture create a nexus of crises—food
insecurity, natural resource depletion and degradation, as well as human
rights violations and inequities.
While it is widely recognized that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions due
to human activity are detrimental to the natural environment, it can be difficult to
untangle the cascading effects on other sectors. To unravel some of the effects, this
paper focuses on three interrelated issues:
1) What are the critical links between climate change and agriculture?
2) How is the nexus of agriculture and climate change affecting human societies
particularly regarding food and water, livelihoods, migration, gender
equality, and other basic survival and human rights?
3) What is the interplay between economic and finance systems, on the one
hand, and food security, climate change, and fundamental human rights, on
the other?
In the process of drawing connections among these issues, the report will identify
the commonality of drivers, or “push” factors, that lead to adverse impacts.
A central theme throughout this report is that policies and practices must
begin with the ecological imperative in order to ensure authentic security and stability
on all fronts including food, water, livelihoods and jobs, climate, energy, and
economic. In turn this engenders equity, social justice, and diverse cultures. This
imperative, or ethos of nature, is a foundation that serves as a steady guide when
reviewing mitigation and adaptation solutions to climate change.
Infused within this theme is the sobering recognition that current consumption
and production patterns are at odds with goals of reducing GHGs and attaining
global food security. For instance, consumption and production levels, based on the
global average, are 25 percent higher than the earth’s ecological capacity.1
As societies
address the myriad ecological and social issues at the axis of global warming,
a central task will be to re-align consumption and production trends in a manner
that can fulfill economic and development requirements. This will require a major
shift away from present economic growth paradigms based on massive resource
extraction and toward creating prosperous and vital societies and economies that
preserve the planet’s environmental capacity
Publication Date: 2011
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