Abstract

<p>Traditional foods are important to the sustainability of their native regions because they are often keystone assets to food security, economic stability, and quality nutrition. Globalization of agricultural markets, changing lifestyles, and rural-to-urban migration has contributed to the gradual loss of traditional foods in developing countries. The transition from traditional foods to imported refined carbohydrates, sugars, and edible oils has promoted nutrient deficiency, economic instability, and food insecurity. While the effects of globalization have been largely negative for indigenous foods, globalization is inevitable and has potentially useful aspects. Local champions and international supporters can leverage specific technologies and market patterns brought about or influenced by globalization to revive culinary traditions, strengthen local food systems, and bolster indigenous livelihoods. Such approaches include helping farmers benefit from technological advances in efficiency and economy of scale, biotechnology, post-harvest processing, and smart infrastructure combined with ethically-conscious food sourcing. Trends such as human migration, exotic food fads, interest in nutritious and organic foods, the rise of social media, and agricultural extension and education can also support improvements in local agricultural products and their globalizing markets. Collectively, these efforts can help revive sustainable traditional food production and enhance the lives and livelihoods of indigenous communities.</p>

Highlights

  • 1.1 Roles of Traditional FoodsTraditional foods can be defined as long-established, culturally important staple crops and foodstuffs

  • Local champions and international supporters can leverage specific technologies and market patterns brought about or influenced by globalization to revive culinary traditions, strengthen local food systems, and bolster indigenous livelihoods. Such approaches include helping farmers benefit from technological advances in efficiency and economy of scale, biotechnology, post-harvest processing, and smart infrastructure combined with ethically-conscious food sourcing

  • Globalization has contributed to the disappearance of indigenous foods, but modern agricultural technologies supported by globalization have the potential to bring them back

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Summary

Roles of Traditional Foods

Traditional foods can be defined as long-established, culturally important staple crops and foodstuffs These crops are often simple to cultivate and are usually cornerstones of the native diet, providing essential proteins, vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. Different social and political movements, including colonization and the Green Revolution, have drastically changed agricultural practices by placing higher value on the production of export crops These changes continue today with trade practices, urbanization, and global diffusion of western tastes and foodstuffs. This paper begins by describing the factors contributing to the disappearance of traditional foods and to the resulting problems It takes an example-centric approach to the discussion of how modern agricultural technologies and global markets can be leveraged to revive traditional foodstuffs

Why Are Traditional Foods Disappearing?
Why Should We Care about the Disappearance of Traditional Foods?
Leveraging Modern Technology to Revive Traditional Foods
Production Efficiency Technologies
Production Economy-of-Scale Technologies
Biotechnologies
Post-Harvest Processing Technologies
Infrastructure Improvements
Leveraging Globalized Markets to Revive Traditional Foods
Human Migration
Global Market Fads for Exotic Foods
Growing Market for Nutritious and Organic Foods
Social Media
Findings
Conclusion
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