Contemporary Social Issues Chapter 1
Contemporary Social Issues Chapter 1
Contemporary Social Issues Chapter 1
Chapter one
Social issues (also social problem, social evil and social conflict) refers to any undesirable
condition that is opposed either by the whole society or by a section of the society.
Social issues are those which affect the human society as a whole. These issues pertain to
human behaviour, including government policies, religious conflicts, gender inequalities,
economic disparities, etc.
Personal problems
Are things that affect individuals and those around them. If someone in a family attempts
suicide, that is a problem for the family
Public issues,
For an issue to become a social concern, it needs to have an influential group define it as
so.
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An influential group is a group that can have a significant impact on public debate and social
policy.
Global warming
Inequality Unemployment
Obesity
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What is a Social Problem?
Objective Elements of Social Problems
Awareness of social conditions through life experiences and through reports in the media.
We see the homeless, hear gunfire in the streets, and see battered women in hospital
emergency rooms.
We read about employees losing their jobs as businesses downsize and factories close
The belief that a particular social condition is harmful to society or to a segment of society
and that it should and can be changed.
We know crime; drug addiction, poverty, racism, violence, and pollution exist.
These are not considered social problems unless a segment of society believes these
conditions diminish the quality of human life.
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Social problems can also be divided into following types in relation to their causative
factors:
1. Social problems due to social factors
2. Social problems due to cultural factors
3. Social problems due to economic factors
4. Social problems due to political and legal factors
5. Social problems due to ecological factors
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2. Issues in Food Security
FOOD SECURITY
Food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to
sufficient safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an
active and healthy life.
This is often confused with food security but should properly be seen as only a
part, albeit an important part of food security.
The question is not only whether food is available in a country but whether it is
available in the right place at the right time and there must be a mechanism for
ensuring that food of the right quality is made available.
2. Food access
Access by individuals to adequate resources (entitlements) to acquire appropriate
foods for a nutritious diet.
These resources need not be exclusively monetary but may also include
traditional rights e.g. to a share of common resources.
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Entitlements are defined as the set of all those commodity bundles over which a
person can establish command given the legal, political, economic and social
arrangements of the community in which he or she lives.
3. Food utilization
Utilization of food through adequate diet, clean water, sanitation, and health care.
This brings out the importance of non-food inputs in food security.
4. Stability of access
Are individuals at high risk of losing their access to food? An example of this
situation would be a landless agricultural laborer who was almost wholly
dependent on agricultural wages in a region of erratic rainfall.
Such a person is at high risk of not being able to find work in a situation of
general crop failure and thus going hungry, i.e. is vulnerable.
For food security objectives to be realized, all four dimensions must be fulfilled
simultaneously.
There are three areas of global concern that impact food security:
1. overpopulation
2. climate change, and
3. urbanization
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1. Overpopulation
Areas of the world with the highest birth rates and population, where demand often exceeds
supply, also have the greatest levels of hunger and disease.
Local ecosystems provide the resources a population needs for food production, health,
environmental management and water. Examples include rangeland, fertile soil, nutrient
cycling, and wildlife for hunting, among others.
The local ecosystem has a certain carrying capacity, and once this is exceeded the ecosystem
becomes stressed and begins to break down. This is defined as ecosystem vulnerability.
The results can include over-farmed soils, denuded grazing lands and dried up or
contaminated wells, all of which contribute to an underfed population.
2. Climate change
Climate change is having an impact on various regions of the world. In Sub-Saharan Africa
droughts are becoming more frequent and of a longer duration.
The indigenous knowledge that developed to deal with less severe drought is no longer
adequate.
The lack of water and continued grazing stresses the ecosystem and causes its disintegration
and a serious food security situation. The Borana tribe in Ethiopia, for instance, is currently
undergoing this phenomenon.
As food sources become more limited, the lack of nutrition exacerbates health by causing
immune suppression and making the population more prone to illness.
Increased disease puts a greater energy demand on the body and leads to a greater need for
nutrients that are not available.
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This is a cycle of hunger and disease that reduces lifespan, productivity and the ability to
improve one’s position.
3. Urbanization
Urbanization is also a contributor to food insecurity.
Mega-cities, cities of ten million-plus inhabitants, are most commonly found in developing
countries.
The world economy has taken advantage of the low-cost labor in these countries and this has
fuelled the rural-to-urban migration.
Most manufacturing jobs are in the cities and as overpopulated and depleted lands fail to
supply basic economic needs despite typically being able to still produce adequate
sustenance, people turn to these urban jobs and opportunities.
Thus far, rural farmers have kept up with the supply, but the economic access to foodstuffs
by urban dwellers remains a problem.
The need to feed these mega-cities and the complications associated with economic access to
food is great. This was highlighted in 2007 and 2008 when rising oil prices led to food
becoming unaffordable to city-dwellers across the globe.
These are exacerbated by the overuse of resources and poor distribution due to income
inequity or social disturbance.
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Encouraging growth in agricultural sectors that focus on locally consumed crops rather
than export markets may stimulate an influx of rural and community-based development
funds and create a national market. Such projects would need to be based on local
structure, knowledge and priorities and operate within the capacity of the ecosystem.
In addition, the education of women has been shown to lead to a reduction in family size
as well as a reduction in poverty, and these results in an improved nutritional status for
the family.
Making people aware of signs of illness in their livestock, setting up nationally or locally
regulated testing schemes for their industrialized food products, and encouraging
community awareness and vigilance will be the first steps.
A combination of these efforts can reduce the stress on the environment and increase local
food distribution and availability.
It must be supported at the national and local levels of every country that becomes involved
in addressing the challenge of food security.
Political management of growing urban centers to reduce inequity and provide basic needs
for the poor will also be critical to success.
Plans must be adapted appropriately to each place according to their needs and desires while
striving to meet standards that have proven effective.
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In conclusion, food security is a multi-dimensional topic. It does not just address the
availability of food, but it also addresses its cost, cultural appropriateness, the balanced
nature of its protein, fat, carbohydrate and micro-nutrient make-up, its source and the
production practices used to cultivate and harvest food products, as well as freedom from
contamination after harvest. This relates to both animal and plant based foods and is an issue
across the globe. Food must not only meet our macro- and micronutrient needs, but it also
must not cause disease in those who consume it.
Efforts to address these topics must take into consideration community-based approaches and
well-rounded interventions.
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2.2. Theoretical Framework for Understanding Food Insecurity
Food insecurity is a situation that exists when people lack secure access to sufficient
amounts of safe and nutritious food for normal growth and development and an active and
health life.
Food insecurity, poor conditions of health and sanitation and inappropriate care and feeding
practices are the major causes of poor nutritional status.
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THE DURATION OF FOOD INSECURITY
Food security analysts have defined two general types of food insecurity:
People are unable to meet their There is a sudden drop in the ability to produce
occurs minimum food requirements over a or access enough food to maintain a good
When... sustained period of time. nutritional status.
The concept of seasonal food security falls between chronic and transitory food insecurity.
It occurs when there is a cyclical pattern of inadequate availability and access to food. This is
associated with seasonal fluctuations in the climate, cropping patterns, work opportunities
(labor demand) and disease.
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2.3. Climate Change and Food Security
Climate change happens in different ways, ranging from increased climate variability and
gradual changes in temperature and precipitation, to increased frequency and intensity of
extreme events.
What are the Impacts of Climate Changes on Agriculture & Food Security?
These will have direct effects on crop growth and their need for water, as well as soil
fertility, water supply for irrigation, and prevalence of pests and diseases.
In terms of livestock, climate change also will affect the quality and amount of feed
supply and water.
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Can you imagine how changes in climatic conditions constitute major challenges for
agriculture productivity?
Climate change impacts affect people differently depending on their livelihoods and socio-
economic status.
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In a narrow sense, a food system is a set of activities from production through to
consumption. For example, think about cassava flour: someone has to grow cassava
(production), dry, mash and package it (processing), deliver it to a market (distribution), where
someone buys and eats it (consumption). Food systems go beyond individual food products.
In a broader sense, a food system also includes interactions with environmental and socio-
economic drivers.
Food security is an outcome of a food system.
Climate change is one of the environmental drivers interacting with a food system. It will
affect not only food production, but also food processing, distribution and consumption.
Summary
Climate change has significant implications for agriculture and food security, creating new
risks and challenges and exacerbating existing vulnerabilities from the local to the global
level.
Rural livelihood systems and poor or marginalized groups that mainly depend on
agriculture, forestry, fishery sectors, are the most vulnerable and strongly affected by
climate change.
Climate change can affect all dimensions of the food security of vulnerable groups as well
as different elements of food systems.
Climate change and food security are twin challenges which need to be addressed
together.
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