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Urbanization and its implications for food and farming
Author(s):

David Satterthwaite, Gordon McGranahan and Cecilia Tacoli

Organisation: The Royal Society

This paper discusses the influences on food and farming of an increasingly urbanized world and a declining ratio of food producers to food consumers. Urbanization has been underpinned by the rapid growth in the world economy and in the proportion of gross world product and of workers in industrial and service enterprises. Globally, agriculture has met the demands from this rapidly growing urban population, including food that is more energy-, land-, water- and greenhouse gas emission-intensive. But hundreds of millions of urban dwellers suffer under-nutrition. So the key issues with regard to agriculture and urbanization are whether the growing and changing demands for agricultural products from growing urban populations can be sustained while at the same time underpinning agricultural prosperity and reducing rural and urban poverty.

Sector: Agriculture
Topic: Poverty, Food
Method:
Type: Other publication
Tags: urbanization, migration, food, farming, hunger
Date published: 2010
Language(s): English
Country:
Hits: 3
Urbanization and its implications for food and farming.pdf
Filesize: 380 kB
Filetype: PDF document, version 1.4
Downloaded: 31

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