Chapter 1. Food security and sovereignty in small island developing states: Contemporary crises and challenges.- Chapter 2. Climate change and food security in the Pacific Islands.- Chapter 3. Development, global change and traditional food security in Pacific Island countries.- Chapter 4. Lost Roots? Fading Food Security in Micronesia.- Chapter 5. Modernisation, traditional food resource management and food security on Eauripik atoll, Federated States of Micronesia.- Chapter 6. Framing Food Security in the Pacific Islands: Resilience in Malo, Vanuatu.- Chapter 7. Postharvest loss in fruit and vegetable markets in Samoa.- Chapter 8. Can the tropical Western and Central Pacific tuna purse seine fishery contribute to Pacific Island population food security?.- Chapter 9. Addressing food and nutrition insecurity in the Caribbean through domestic smallholder farming system innovation.- Chapter 10. Knowledge, markets, and finance: Factors affecting the innovation potential of smallholder farmers in the Caribbean Community.- Chapter 11. Fisheries governance and food security in the Eastern Caribbean.- Chapter 12. Food security and livelihood vulnerability to climate change in Trinidad and Tobago.- Chapter 13. Exploring the role of social capital in influencing knowledge flows and innovation in St. Lucia.- Chapter 14. Eating meat or eating money? Factors influencing animal-source food consumption in Timor-Leste.- Chapter 15. The role of wild foods in food security: the example of Timor-Leste.
John Connell is Professor of Human Geography in the University of Sydney, New South Wales. He has a PhD from University College London, and is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences of Australia and of the NSW Geographical Society. He was previously a Research Officer at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, and in the Department of Economics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. He has been a consultant to the International Labour Organisation, the World Health Organisation, the South Pacific Commission, SPREP, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the Commonwealth Secretariat and the International Organisation of Migration. His research focuses on development in small island states, including those in the Caribbean and Indian Ocean, centered on migration and remittances, rural development and coral atolls.
Kristen Lowitt is Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography at Brandon University. Her research utilizes participatory and community-based approaches to understand the relationships between food security, natural resource management, and communities in rural and coastal contexts. She has undertaken research in the Global North and South. She is also a previous Fellow on the Council on the Future of Food Security and Agriculture, World Economic Forum.
This book provides a contemporary overview of the social-ecological and economic vulnerabilities that produce food and nutrition insecurity in various small island contexts, including both high islands and atolls, from the Pacific to the Caribbean. It examines the historical and contemporary circumstances that have accompanied the shift from subsistence production to the consumption of imported, processed foods and drinks, and the impact of this transition on nutrition and the rise of non-communicable diseases. It also assesses the challenges involved in reversing this trend, and how more effective social and economic policies, agricultural and fisheries strategies, and governance arrangements could promote more resilient and sustainable small island food systems. It offers both theoretical and practical perspectives, and brings together a broad range of policy areas, e.g. agriculture, food, commerce, health, planning and socio-economic policy.
Given its scope, the book offers a valuable resource for a range of disciplines in a number of regional contexts, and for the growing number of scholars and practitioners working on and in small island states. It will be of particular value as the first book to examine the diversity and commonalities of island states around the globe as they confront issues of food security.