Abstract

As an agricultural country with large natural resources, Indonesia still has considerable problems in managing food security. This is evidenced by the lack of agricultural land and human resources that can support people's food needs so that the government still imports food from other countries. These issues as; it are feared that population growth and high food consumption power, social exclusion (marginalization of agricultural laborers and agricultural land) will cause food security vulnerability in the future. This Mixed method quantitative and qualitative method by statistical and in-depth interview study involving 169 respondents from many stakeholders such as politicians, academicians, farmers, and students to determine policy construction for sustainable rice food sovereignty in Indonesia. The statistical study shows the rice consumption in Indonesia is correlated to education than the age and gender of the respondents. The study indicating problems such as; the welfare of farmers, the application of price limits for staple goods, and improving the quality of agriculture both natural resources, human resources and the provision of agricultural equipment assistance have not been resolved properly. To build food security, it should be balanced with the application of the concept of food sovereignty which is realized by aligning and maximizing competence between political resources, environmental resources capacity, and environmental diplomacy.

Highlights

  • Indonesia is an archipelagic country that stretches widely and has quite extensive agricultural land

  • The study indicating problems such as; the welfare of farmers, the application of price limits for staple goods, and improving the quality of agriculture both natural resources, human resources, and the provision of agricultural equipment assistance have not been resolved properly. It should be balanced with the application of the concept of food sovereignty which is realized by aligning and maximizing competence between political resources, environmental resources capacity, and environmental diplomacy

  • Indonesia is located in a tropical area with a climate suitable for extensive agricultural business so that Indonesia is an agricultural country

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Summary

Introduction

Indonesia is an archipelagic country that stretches widely and has quite extensive agricultural land. In reality, Indonesia does not has rice food sovereignty yet (Davidson, 2018). This is the reason why Indonesia still imports rice (Warr, 2005). The theoretical perspective and the results of previous research that the author has done show that there is no concept or model or theory on the relevant sustainable rice food sovereignty policy implemented in Asia (Sharma and Daugbjerg, 2020) or even in Indonesia itself (Davidson, 2018). This study focuses on how to construct a model for sustainable rice food sovereignty in Indonesia

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