Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Allschwil, Switzerland.
University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Front Public Health. 2023 Feb 2;11:1081535. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1081535. eCollection 2023.
Secondary cities tend to be better linked with local food systems than primate cities, acting as important platforms to trade agricultural produce with rural surrounding. COVID-19, conflicts and climate change continue to expose inefficiencies in food systems and have further exacerbated malnutrition, calling for substantial food systems transformations. However, tackling current food systems' challenges requires new approaches to ensure food and nutrition security. Nutritious and agroecologically produced food offer the potential to transform food systems by improving diets and alleviating pressure on the environment, as well as by creating jobs and reducing poverty. This paper describes the design of a project by a Swiss public-private consortium to improve food and nutrition security and to reduce poverty in city ecosystems in six secondary cities in Bangladesh, Kenya and Rwanda through governance/policy and supply and demand side interventions.
The Nutrition in City Ecosystems (NICE) project promotes well-balanced nutrition for city populations through interdisciplinary agricultural, food, and health sector collaborations along city-specific value chains. Adopting a transdiciplinary systems approach, the main interventions of NICE are (i) advocacy and policy dialogue, (ii) building of decentralized institutional capacity in multi-sectoral collaborations, (iii) support of data-driven planning, coordination and resource mobilization, (iv) anchoring of innovations and new approaches in city-level partnerships, (v) capacity building in the agricultural, retail, health and education sectors, as well as (vi) evidence generation from putting policies into practice at the local level. NICE is coordinated by in-country partners and local offices of the Swiss public-private consortium partners.
The NICE project seeks to contribute to urban food system resilience and enhanced sustainable nutrition for city populations by (A) strengthening urban governance structures involving key stakeholders including women and youth, (B) generating income for producers along the supply chain, (C) triggering change in producers' and consumers' behavior such that nutritious and agroecologically produced foods are both in demand as well as available and affordable in urban markets, and (D) allowing a scale up of successful approaches to other national and international cities and city networks.
与一线城市相比,二线城市往往与当地的食品系统联系更为紧密,是与农村地区进行农产品交易的重要平台。新冠疫情、冲突和气候变化继续暴露了食品系统的低效性,进一步加剧了营养不良问题,因此需要对食品系统进行重大变革。然而,要解决当前食品系统面临的挑战,需要采取新的方法来确保食品和营养安全。营养丰富且符合生态农业标准的农产品具有通过改善饮食和减轻对环境的压力,创造就业机会和减少贫困来改变食品系统的潜力。本文介绍了一个由瑞士公私合作财团实施的项目的设计,该项目通过治理/政策和供需方干预措施,旨在改善孟加拉国、肯尼亚和卢旺达六个二线城市的城市生态系统中的粮食和营养安全以及减贫问题。
营养城市生态系统(NICE)项目通过城市特定价值链上的农业、食品和卫生部门跨学科合作,促进城市人口的营养均衡。该项目采用跨学科系统方法,其主要干预措施包括:(i)宣传和政策对话;(ii)在多部门合作中建立分散的机构能力;(iii)支持基于数据的规划、协调和资源调动;(iv)将创新和新方法纳入城市伙伴关系;(v)在农业、零售、卫生和教育部门进行能力建设;(vi)从地方层面实施政策中生成证据。NICE 项目由国内合作伙伴和瑞士公私合作财团伙伴的当地办事处协调。
NICE 项目旨在通过以下方式为城市食品系统的弹性和增强城市人口的可持续营养做出贡献:(A)加强涉及包括妇女和青年在内的关键利益相关者的城市治理结构;(B)增加供应链沿线生产者的收入;(C)改变生产者和消费者的行为,使营养丰富且符合生态农业标准的食品在城市市场上既受欢迎又能负担得起;(D)将成功的方法推广到其他国家和国际城市及城市网络。