2014
DOI: 10.1002/2014ef000250
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Feeding humanity through global food trade

Abstract: The recent intensification of international trade has led to a globalization of food commodities and to an increased disconnection between human populations and the land and water resources that support them through crop and livestock production. Several countries are not self-sufficient and depend on imports from other regions. Despite the recognized importance of the role of trade in global and regional food security, the societal reliance on domestic production and international trade remains poorly quantif… Show more

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Cited by 354 publications
(249 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
(141 reference statements)
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“…Engage with planetary opportunities.-The scale of human societies is increasingly global, with telecoupling linking the resource demands of increasingly wealthy urban populations with transformative ecological change across the biosphere , Fairhead et al 2012, D'Odorico et al 2014, Nepstad et al 2014. It is also highly unlikely that human populations will decline significantly in the foreseeable future (Bradshaw and Brook 2014).…”
Section: Sustaining Nonhuman Nature In An Anthropogenic Biospherementioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Engage with planetary opportunities.-The scale of human societies is increasingly global, with telecoupling linking the resource demands of increasingly wealthy urban populations with transformative ecological change across the biosphere , Fairhead et al 2012, D'Odorico et al 2014, Nepstad et al 2014. It is also highly unlikely that human populations will decline significantly in the foreseeable future (Bradshaw and Brook 2014).…”
Section: Sustaining Nonhuman Nature In An Anthropogenic Biospherementioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the challenges are certainly as great as the opportunities, there is good evidence that even more land can be spared for nonhuman nature as urbanization and societal upscaling continue, depending on the productivity gains attainable in agriculture and forestry through sustained land use intensification combined with more equitable distribution to meet growing societal demands for food, feed, housing, and energy (Neumann et al 2010, Tilman et al 2011, Tomich et al 2011, Loos et al 2014. To succeed in these efforts, it is essential to avoid the mere displacement of societal demands from one region to another by monitoring and improved governance of agricultural supply chains and environmental programs (Fairhead et al 2012, D'Odorico et al 2014, Nepstad et al 2014, Scales 2014.…”
Section: Sustaining Nonhuman Nature In An Anthropogenic Biospherementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Forty-four percent of global agricultural areas and almost 2 billion people are located over the drylands, and the majority (90 %) are in developing countries (D'Odorico et al, 2013). Overexploitation of natural resources in extremely vulnerable regions can accelerate land degradation and desertification process, affecting ecosystem functions and de- creasing productivity, biodiversity and landscape heterogeneity, and represents a major threat to the environment and human welfare (Mainguet, 1994;Reynolds and Stafford Smith, 2002;Montanarella, 2007;Salvati and Zitti, 2008;Cerdà et al, 2010;Santini et al, 2010;Kashaigili and Majaliwa, 2013;Pulido-Fernández et al, 2013;Bisaro et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Global food supply is now a complex system. The interconnected nature of inter-country food dependence has increased dramatically over the last few decades [8]. A globalised market can make the system itself more resilient to localised shocks when food can be sourced from alternative places not experiencing the particular shock.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%