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More Than Food: An Analysis of Multidimensional Relationships in Our Food System

University of New Hampshire Scholars Repository (University of New Hampshire at Manchester) 2017 Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jessica Erin Newnan

Summary

This analysis examines the food system as a multidimensional construct shaped by environmental, social, economic, and cultural factors, arguing that understanding food requires looking beyond production to the full range of systems that influence what people eat. Microplastic contamination of food is one dimension of how environmental degradation intersects with food system health.

Food is an integral part of everyday life for human beings, thus meriting particular attention from research and education. Looking further in depth at the factors that influence food, it becomes apparent that this is a complex topic that is related to several systems within the constructs of society. Here, the food system is approached with the understanding that several systems influence food consumption options and decisions including the agricultural, economic, education, energy, health, and political systems. To identify the relationships more closely, a three-dimensional model was built to represent the food system and depict several key factors, their relationships, and feedback loops that exist within the system. Overall, 20 factors, 50 relationships, and 4 feedback loops were defined. These relationships were then explored to define not only their existence, but also what influence each factor imposes on the others.

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