Abstract

The purpose of this paper was to show the effects of the Ebola and COVID-19 pandemics on food security vulnerability in West Africa. The methodology is based on a scoping literature review using the PRISMA method. The study showed that food security was affected by the restrictive measures in the different West African countries. In addition, it shows that this region is highly vulnerable to such crises, which can combine their effects with those of other events such as climate change and civil unrest. In both pandemics, all pillars of food security were affected. The effects on urban and rural centers may be very different. The study suggests a better understanding of the differences between rural and urban centers and between men and women and how long-term restraint measures can affect rural areas where agriculture is the main lever for reducing food insecurity. Food security must be seriously considered by governments when implementing restrictive measures during a pandemic. Consideration of health factors alone at the expense of food security can greatly exacerbate health problems and even increase cases of disease.

Highlights

  • Food security is a basic human right, yet an estimated 26% percent of the world population (~2 billion people) were food insecure in 2019 [1,2]

  • This is a stark reminder of the urgency to reconsider how to achieve the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, around issues related to global food security, which is mainly related to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2

  • We examined the main question followed by the five sub-questions to further detail the various aspects regarding food security and pandemics

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Summary

Introduction

Food security is a basic human right, yet an estimated 26% percent of the world population (~2 billion people) were food insecure in 2019 [1,2]. World hunger continues to be on the rise, and it was predicted, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, that if trends continue to increase at the pre-COVID-19 rate, 2030 would result in more than 840 million hungry peoples rather than achieving the current goal of total hunger eradication [2]. This is a stark reminder of the urgency to reconsider how to achieve the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, around issues related to global food security, which is mainly related to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2. The five targets of SDG 2 mainly focus on access to food and market, nutrition, production, and preservation of genetic material

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