Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food

Locally harvesting and commercializing food has the potential to reduce food insecurity levels in Nunavut. Local food harvesting and the consumption of traditional food is a fundamental component of cultural identity, cultural stability, and community solidarity in Nunavut. Nonetheless, current solu...

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Main Author: Fox, William
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/17930
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:17930 2023-05-15T15:10:25+02:00 Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food Fox, William 2018-04-16 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/17930 unknown etd10624 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/17930 Graduating extended essay / Research project 2018 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:41:33Z Locally harvesting and commercializing food has the potential to reduce food insecurity levels in Nunavut. Local food harvesting and the consumption of traditional food is a fundamental component of cultural identity, cultural stability, and community solidarity in Nunavut. Nonetheless, current solutions often focus on decreasing the price of market foods through subsidies, thus making it easier for food to be shipped into the territory from southern suppliers. This research paper explores the main identified drivers of food insecurity, the impact food insecurity has on health, the existing policies already in place, and a combined policy solution consisting of four integrated programs that could reduce food insecurity levels in Nunavut. The integrated policy solution considers implementing territorial Country Food Markets (CFM), a Food Acquisition Program, a School Meals Program, and a school-based arctic greenhouse initiative program under the Nunavut Harvester Support Program (NHSP). Analysis is based on a literature review, four jurisdictional scans, and thirteen expert semi-structured interviews. This report recommends government consider implementing all four programs under the Nunavut Harvester Support Program, beginning as pilot projects in three territorial communities of divergent size (small, medium, and large) and administrative capacity following additional research undertaken in Nunavut. These policies could help address some of the barriers existent in current programs offered under the NHSP and some of the main drivers of food insecurity in the short-term. Additional long-term solutions that address the growing threats climate change has on hunting (including shorter hunting seasons, changing animal migratory routes, and declining species) are necessary. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Climate change Nunavut Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Arctic Nunavut
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language unknown
description Locally harvesting and commercializing food has the potential to reduce food insecurity levels in Nunavut. Local food harvesting and the consumption of traditional food is a fundamental component of cultural identity, cultural stability, and community solidarity in Nunavut. Nonetheless, current solutions often focus on decreasing the price of market foods through subsidies, thus making it easier for food to be shipped into the territory from southern suppliers. This research paper explores the main identified drivers of food insecurity, the impact food insecurity has on health, the existing policies already in place, and a combined policy solution consisting of four integrated programs that could reduce food insecurity levels in Nunavut. The integrated policy solution considers implementing territorial Country Food Markets (CFM), a Food Acquisition Program, a School Meals Program, and a school-based arctic greenhouse initiative program under the Nunavut Harvester Support Program (NHSP). Analysis is based on a literature review, four jurisdictional scans, and thirteen expert semi-structured interviews. This report recommends government consider implementing all four programs under the Nunavut Harvester Support Program, beginning as pilot projects in three territorial communities of divergent size (small, medium, and large) and administrative capacity following additional research undertaken in Nunavut. These policies could help address some of the barriers existent in current programs offered under the NHSP and some of the main drivers of food insecurity in the short-term. Additional long-term solutions that address the growing threats climate change has on hunting (including shorter hunting seasons, changing animal migratory routes, and declining species) are necessary.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Fox, William
spellingShingle Fox, William
Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
author_facet Fox, William
author_sort Fox, William
title Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
title_short Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
title_full Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
title_fullStr Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
title_full_unstemmed Addressing food insecurity in Nunavut: Policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
title_sort addressing food insecurity in nunavut: policies to support the local harvesting and commercialization of food
publishDate 2018
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/17930
geographic Arctic
Nunavut
geographic_facet Arctic
Nunavut
genre Arctic
Climate change
Nunavut
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Nunavut
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