2023
DOI: 10.1590/1806-9479.2021.251291
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Toward food sovereignty and self-sufficiency in Latin America and the Caribbean: opportunities for agricultural complementarity

Abstract: Food self-sufficiency is a relevant political issue in many countries, developed and developing, particularly to satisfy the internal nutritional needs of the population and face situations in which the prices of basic products are unstable or when a country faces an external shock. Improving resilience involves strengthening local rural communities to meet demand with domestic production. The member countries of Latin America and the Caribbean (LCN) produce enough food to sustain their population and to be on… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Hong et al (2022) showed that agrarian regions in the southern hemisphere (including LAC) have been responsible for the largest share of land-use emissions embodied in exported commodities, often resulting from deforestation. Studies have highlighted the "deterioration of terms of trade" that LAC has been experiencing in the last several decades, because the region has been increasingly supplying global food demands at lower market prices, yet it bears significant environmental costs that are not accounted for (Cango et al, 2023;Falconí et al, 2017). Flachsbarth et al (2015) highlighted potential future environmental trade-offs in LAC from increased trade liberalization, including worsening water quality, increased LUC emissions, or biodiversity loss.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hong et al (2022) showed that agrarian regions in the southern hemisphere (including LAC) have been responsible for the largest share of land-use emissions embodied in exported commodities, often resulting from deforestation. Studies have highlighted the "deterioration of terms of trade" that LAC has been experiencing in the last several decades, because the region has been increasingly supplying global food demands at lower market prices, yet it bears significant environmental costs that are not accounted for (Cango et al, 2023;Falconí et al, 2017). Flachsbarth et al (2015) highlighted potential future environmental trade-offs in LAC from increased trade liberalization, including worsening water quality, increased LUC emissions, or biodiversity loss.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%