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      The Mitigating Impact of Land Tenure Security on Drought-Induced Food Insecurity: Evidence from Rural Malawi

      1 , 2
      The Journal of Development Studies
      Informa UK Limited

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          Food security: the challenge of feeding 9 billion people.

          Continuing population and consumption growth will mean that the global demand for food will increase for at least another 40 years. Growing competition for land, water, and energy, in addition to the overexploitation of fisheries, will affect our ability to produce food, as will the urgent requirement to reduce the impact of the food system on the environment. The effects of climate change are a further threat. But the world can produce more food and can ensure that it is used more efficiently and equitably. A multifaceted and linked global strategy is needed to ensure sustainable and equitable food security, different components of which are explored here.
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            Global land use change, economic globalization, and the looming land scarcity.

            A central challenge for sustainability is how to preserve forest ecosystems and the services that they provide us while enhancing food production. This challenge for developing countries confronts the force of economic globalization, which seeks cropland that is shrinking in availability and triggers deforestation. Four mechanisms-the displacement, rebound, cascade, and remittance effects-that are amplified by economic globalization accelerate land conversion. A few developing countries have managed a land use transition over the recent decades that simultaneously increased their forest cover and agricultural production. These countries have relied on various mixes of agricultural intensification, land use zoning, forest protection, increased reliance on imported food and wood products, the creation of off-farm jobs, foreign capital investments, and remittances. Sound policies and innovations can therefore reconcile forest preservation with food production. Globalization can be harnessed to increase land use efficiency rather than leading to uncontrolled land use expansion. To do so, land systems should be understood and modeled as open systems with large flows of goods, people, and capital that connect local land use with global-scale factors.
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              Recent Developments in the Econometrics of Program Evaluation

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                The Journal of Development Studies
                The Journal of Development Studies
                Informa UK Limited
                0022-0388
                1743-9140
                December 01 2020
                May 20 2020
                December 01 2020
                : 56
                : 12
                : 2169-2193
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Newcastle Business School, Department of Accounting and Financial Management, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK
                [2 ]UTS Business School, Centre for Health Economic Research and Evaluation (CHERE), University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia
                Article
                10.1080/00220388.2020.1762862
                f6a98952-91b1-493e-82a2-689bad0ad4c4
                © 2020
                History

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