How organic food systems support sustainability of diets

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

How organic food systems support sustainability of diets. / Kahl, Johannes; Strassner, Carola; Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted; Lairon, Denis; Paoletti, Flavio.

Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems. ed. / Barbara Burlingame; Sandro Dernini. Oxfordshire : CABI Publishing, 2019. p. 232-239.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kahl, J, Strassner, C, Bügel, SG, Lairon, D & Paoletti, F 2019, How organic food systems support sustainability of diets. in B Burlingame & S Dernini (eds), Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems. CABI Publishing, Oxfordshire, pp. 232-239.

APA

Kahl, J., Strassner, C., Bügel, S. G., Lairon, D., & Paoletti, F. (2019). How organic food systems support sustainability of diets. In B. Burlingame, & S. Dernini (Eds.), Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems (pp. 232-239). CABI Publishing.

Vancouver

Kahl J, Strassner C, Bügel SG, Lairon D, Paoletti F. How organic food systems support sustainability of diets. In Burlingame B, Dernini S, editors, Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems. Oxfordshire: CABI Publishing. 2019. p. 232-239

Author

Kahl, Johannes ; Strassner, Carola ; Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted ; Lairon, Denis ; Paoletti, Flavio. / How organic food systems support sustainability of diets. Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems. editor / Barbara Burlingame ; Sandro Dernini. Oxfordshire : CABI Publishing, 2019. pp. 232-239

Bibtex

@inbook{457176e5039446948d4fc103c56c2843,
title = "How organic food systems support sustainability of diets",
abstract = "Sustainable models are needed in order to transform the current food systems. This chapter presents arguments for using organic food systems as such a model. Food systems can be recognized as coupled human and natural systems, with a set activities and outcomes in which the boundaries of the system can be defined. This chapter takes sustainability as an inherent property of a food system. The identification of 'enabling mechanisms' from the organic food system actors' perspective may give insights to drivers and factors shaping food systems towards enhanced sustainability. Organic food systems are driven by both codified principles and value-based ethical and personal responsibilities. Organic production practices are specified in international and national standards and regulations, and are undergoing continual transformation processes. Organic farming is currently practiced in 172 countries by 2.3 million producers, and consumer demand is documented by a present market size of US$80 billion, thus a lot of experience and data are already available. As organic farming provides a whole range of ecosystem services and promotes biodiversity, it may contribute to environmental sustainability. Studies have shown that consumers who regularly buy and eat organic food seem to link health and environmental sustainability through their food choices. This indicates that the organic food systems may also contribute to sustainable diets in theory and practice.",
author = "Johannes Kahl and Carola Strassner and B{\"u}gel, {Susanne Gjedsted} and Denis Lairon and Flavio Paoletti",
note = "CURIS 2019 NEXS 031",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781786392848",
pages = "232--239",
editor = "Barbara Burlingame and Sandro Dernini",
booktitle = "Sustainable Diets",
publisher = "CABI Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - How organic food systems support sustainability of diets

AU - Kahl, Johannes

AU - Strassner, Carola

AU - Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted

AU - Lairon, Denis

AU - Paoletti, Flavio

N1 - CURIS 2019 NEXS 031

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Sustainable models are needed in order to transform the current food systems. This chapter presents arguments for using organic food systems as such a model. Food systems can be recognized as coupled human and natural systems, with a set activities and outcomes in which the boundaries of the system can be defined. This chapter takes sustainability as an inherent property of a food system. The identification of 'enabling mechanisms' from the organic food system actors' perspective may give insights to drivers and factors shaping food systems towards enhanced sustainability. Organic food systems are driven by both codified principles and value-based ethical and personal responsibilities. Organic production practices are specified in international and national standards and regulations, and are undergoing continual transformation processes. Organic farming is currently practiced in 172 countries by 2.3 million producers, and consumer demand is documented by a present market size of US$80 billion, thus a lot of experience and data are already available. As organic farming provides a whole range of ecosystem services and promotes biodiversity, it may contribute to environmental sustainability. Studies have shown that consumers who regularly buy and eat organic food seem to link health and environmental sustainability through their food choices. This indicates that the organic food systems may also contribute to sustainable diets in theory and practice.

AB - Sustainable models are needed in order to transform the current food systems. This chapter presents arguments for using organic food systems as such a model. Food systems can be recognized as coupled human and natural systems, with a set activities and outcomes in which the boundaries of the system can be defined. This chapter takes sustainability as an inherent property of a food system. The identification of 'enabling mechanisms' from the organic food system actors' perspective may give insights to drivers and factors shaping food systems towards enhanced sustainability. Organic food systems are driven by both codified principles and value-based ethical and personal responsibilities. Organic production practices are specified in international and national standards and regulations, and are undergoing continual transformation processes. Organic farming is currently practiced in 172 countries by 2.3 million producers, and consumer demand is documented by a present market size of US$80 billion, thus a lot of experience and data are already available. As organic farming provides a whole range of ecosystem services and promotes biodiversity, it may contribute to environmental sustainability. Studies have shown that consumers who regularly buy and eat organic food seem to link health and environmental sustainability through their food choices. This indicates that the organic food systems may also contribute to sustainable diets in theory and practice.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9781786392848

SP - 232

EP - 239

BT - Sustainable Diets

A2 - Burlingame, Barbara

A2 - Dernini, Sandro

PB - CABI Publishing

CY - Oxfordshire

ER -

ID: 212201882