Drivers and stressors of resilience to food insecurity – Evidence from 35 countries

dc.contributor.author d’Errico, M.; Pinay, J.; Luu, A.; Jumbe, E. 
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.date.lastModified 2021-12-17T15:38:49.0000000Z
dc.description.abstract Resilience is often associated with multivalued and multi-faceted strategies, programs, and projects. After approximately 15 years of empirical evidence in the literature, few research questions remain unexplored and unanswered, especially with the recent occurrence of a global pandemic. In this paper, we are assessing whether there are few and consistently relevant elements that determine resilience capacity as well as investigating which shocks are most dramatically reducing resilience. We also investigate which coping strategies are most frequently adopted in the presence of shocks. Our results show that diversification of income sources, education, access to land, livestock, and agricultural inputs, are the main drivers of households’ resilience capacity. Moreover, the most prevailing shocks are found to be natural, health and livelihood-related shocks. In addition to this, we show that reducing the quantity and quality of food consumed, seeking an extra job, selling assets, taking credit, relying on relatives and social networks are the most adopted coping strategies. Finally, we found that coping strategies are able to mitigate the adverse effects of shocks on resilience capacity; however, they are not sufficient to offset their long-term negative consequences. Our conclusion is that adequate investments in resilience are conditional to a) engaging with activities that are broadly consistent across countries and b) fine-tuning the interventions based on context-specificity.
dc.format.numberofpages 48 p.
dc.identifier.eissn 2521-1838
dc.identifier.isbn 978-92-5-135227-4
dc.identifier.issn 2664-5785
dc.identifier.url http://www.fao.org/3/cb7411en/cb7411en.pdf
dc.language.iso English
dc.publisher FAO ;
dc.relation.ispartofseries FAO Agricultural Development Economics Working Paper
dc.relation.number 21-09
dc.rights.copyright FAO
dc.title Drivers and stressors of resilience to food insecurity – Evidence from 35 countries
dc.title.subtitle Background paper for The State of Food and Agriculture 2021. FAO Agricultural Development Economics Working Paper 21-09
dc.type Book (series)
fao.altmetricbadge Yes
fao.citation <div class="ExternalClassC96DF5ABB0E24720B4A55829B8705FC8"><p>d’Errico, M., Pinay, J., Luu, A. &amp; Jumbe, E. 2021. <em>Drivers and stressors of resilience to food insecurity – Evidence from 35 countries. Background paper for The State of Food and Agriculture 2021</em>. FAO Agricultural Development Economics Working Paper 21-09. Rome, FAO.<br></p></div>
fao.contentcategory Technical
fao.edition 1
fao.fourbetters A Better Life; Amélioration des conditions de vie; Una vida mejor; улучшение качества жизни; 更好的生活; حياة أفضل
fao.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.4060/cb7411en
fao.identifier.googlebookurl https://books.google.it/books?id=Sy5VEAAAQBAJ&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&dq=Drivers+and+stressors+of+resilience+to+food+insecurity+%E2%80%93+Evidence+from+35+countries&source=gbs_navlinks_s
fao.identifier.jobnumber CB7411EN
fao.identifier.uri http://www.fao.org/documents/card/en/c/cb7411en
fao.placeofpublication Rome, Italy ;
fao.sdgs 01. End poverty in all its forms everywhere
fao.sdgs "02. End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture
fao.subject.agrovoc food insecurity
fao.subject.agrovoc case studies
fao.subject.agrovoc household food security
fao.subject.agrovoc resilience
fao.subject.agrovoc pandemics
fao.visibilitytype PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE
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