Food systems deliver essential services, but are also vulnerable to a wide range of shocks. A major concern amongst policymakers is therefore how to build more resilient food systems. This paper asks which processes can be used by policymakers and stakeholders to develop strategies tailored to their specific context to enhance resilience. Such processes should be inclusive, recurring, and involve governments. A good process will have well-designed objectives, assess risks and opportunities, and generate action plans with clear responsibilities. This paper provides examples taken from several OECD Member countries. Although to date there are few examples of processes that meet all the criteria mentioned above, this paper identifies several initiatives that embody one or more criteria and could serve as a model to policymakers.
Practical approaches to develop resilience strategies for food systems
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
17 February 202673 Pages
-
Working paper
Economic analysis, literature findings and synthesis
28 May 202590 Pages -
Working paper
Impacts on the triple challenge and cost‑benefits analysis
22 May 202527 Pages -
Working paper
A literature review on policy effectiveness
9 May 202547 Pages -
Working paper
Case study of the Australian beef and wheat sectors
2 April 202580 Pages -
21 February 202570 Pages
-
Working paper
Evidence from 40 countries
19 February 202539 Pages -
Working paper
A stocktake and typology
12 February 202566 Pages
Related publications
-
12 November 20255 Pages
-
Report3 November 202525 Pages