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Vulnerability Amidst Plenty? Food Security and Climate Change in Australia
Book chapter   Peer reviewed

Vulnerability Amidst Plenty? Food Security and Climate Change in Australia

Ruth Beilin, Michael Santhanam-Martin and Tamara S Sysak
Sustainable Solutions for Food Security: Combating Climate Change by Adaptation, pp.437-457
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
2019
url
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77878-5_21View
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Abstract

food security lock-in resilience vulnerability climate change adaptation
The reality of climate change, and the expectation that agricultural production systems will need to adapt in response to it are now largely accepted by the Australian agricultural policy community. However, the effect of Australia's market-oriented agricultural policy is to delink the matter of adaptation from questions of Australian food security: national food security is considered assured by national income and global trade and food security is framed as the contribution that Australian farmers and agricultural technologists can make to the food security of others elsewhere in the world. Adaptation in this view is the process of farming system innovation, undertaken at individual enterprise scale, that allows Australian farm enterprises to remain profitable and globally competitive, even as environmental conditions change and on-farm vulnerabilities increase. In this chapter, we argue that Australia's export-focused agricultural policy and more general assumptions of domestic food security result in the framing of adaptation as a technical process located at the scale of the farming enterprise and that this framing ignores important threats to Australian food security, in particular at the household scale. In fact, food producers and the rural communities where they live are themselves amongst the most vulnerable. In our reading, climate change is just one of the conditions creating this vulnerability for Australian rural communities, and adaptation must be understood in the context of multiple pressures that threaten the ability of farmers to carry on farming. This includes the volatility and competitiveness of both domestic and export markets and the concentration of market power at key stages of agricultural value chains.

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