Abstract

By the mid-century, urban areas are expected to house two-thirds of the world’s population of approximately 10 billion people. The key challenge will be to provide food for all with fewer farmers in rural areas and limited options for expanding cultivated fields in urban areas, with sustainable soil management being a fundamental criterion for achieving sustainability goals. Understanding how nature works in a fast changing world and fostering nature-based agriculture (such as low-input farming) are crucial for sustaining food systems in the face of worsening urban heat island (UHI) effects and other climatic variables. The best fit for the context is transformative agroecology, which connects ecological networks, sustainable farming approaches, and social movements through change-oriented research and action. Even though agroecology has been practiced for over a century, its potential to address the socioeconomic impact of the food system remained largely unexplored until recently. Agroecological approaches, which involve effective interactions between researchers, policy makers, farmers, and consumers, can improve social cohesion and socioeconomic synergies while reducing the use of various agricultural inputs. This review presents a timeline of agroecology transformation from the past to the present and discusses the possibilities, prospects, and challenges of agroecological urbanism toward a resilient urban future.

Highlights

  • The International standards requested a low threshold of chemical residues in agricultural products. This contributed to a growing recognition of the importance and positive impacts of agroecological practices on food systems and climate change mitigation, among researchers working toward sustainable agroecosystems [16]

  • In a century marked by rapid climate and social-ecological change, urban food systems around the world face enormous challenges

  • The recent coronavirus outbreak is a stark reminder that food and health are two of humanity’s most basic needs

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Summary

A Vision for the Future of Sustainable

Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développent (CIRAD), UMR Eco&Sols, Hanoi 10000, Vietnam. Eco&Sols, University of Montpellier (UMR), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche. Agronomique pour le Développent (CIRAD), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRAE), Institut de Recherche pour le Développent (IRD), Montpellier SupAgro, 34060 Montpellier, France. Alliance of Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Asia Hub, Common Microbial Biotechnology Platform (CMBP), Hanoi 10000, Vietnam

Introduction
Then and Now
Agroecology Is a Footnote in Agricultural History
The Rise of Urban Agroecology
Is For
Is Achieving Sustainability through Urban Agroecology a Catch-22?
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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