Fitting Fish into the Food System
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Course Description
There is a growing perception that our global food system is broken. Billions of people around the world lack adequate nutrition for healthy and productive lives, and obesity now exceeds hunger even in poor communities. Agricultural practices add to climate change, biodiversity loss, and other environmental harms, and freshwater and soils are widely depleted. Farmers who produce food in many parts of the world may lack the income to feed their own families. What's missing from this conversation about food and agriculture is fish, or more broadly, 'blue foods', animals and plants cultivated or captured in ocean and freshwater systems worldwide. This seminar will explore the role of blue foods in creating a sustainable and healthy global food system. It will build off The Blue Food Assessment - an international initiative led by Stanford with contributions from over 100 researchers from around the world - to explore the nutrition, environment, justice, equity, and climate dimensions of fish within the global food system. We will probe a wide range of questions, including: Do fish provide a healthier option than meat in all diets?; What is aquaculture all about, and is it sustainable?; Is seaweed the solution for a broken food system?; What is the role of blue foods in decarbonizing the food sector?; Are small-scale fish producers a small part of food systems - or a large part? Is food justice at risk in fisheries and global fish trade? How might the science of blue foods change national food policies? Is there a role for the private sector in developing healthy and sustainable blue foods? The class will be structured around readings, discussions, debates, essay-writing, and role playing as we seek solutions to global food system challenges through blue foods.
Grading Basis
RLT - Letter (ABCD/NP)
Min
3
Max
3
Course Repeatable for Degree Credit?
No
Course Component
SU Intro Seminar - Freshman
Enrollment Optional?
No