Thursday, May 27, 2021

sdg 2.1 ap for food for thought.



In our class for this term, food for thought, we are learning about death. Not literal death, but how food isn't always as good as we think. In our first unit, we covered life. In this action project for unit two, we are addressing sustainable development goal 2, which shines a light on issues relating to world hunger and specific issues pertaining to that category. I chose subsection of SDG 2, 2.1. For This assignment, We had to pitch a solution as a UN member. SDG 2.1 addresses world hunger and how it's impacting the world. I propose we make food more accessible to everyone, as that is an issue currently. My solution can help with saving millions of lives in the near future. Here is my idea for how to solve it, and a little extra information to get your head around the problem its self.







Did you know, that almost 9% of the world’s population goes to bed with an empty stomach?
Think about what would happen if Chicago suddenly ran out of food. We would have to figure out how to get food back in, for the time being. In the meantime, people would be starving. Sdg 2.1 addresses the issue of world hunger and ending it by 2030. We need to make the issue of world hunger a bigger priority than it is now since people are dying every day. More land should be available for farm use. To combat this issue: we should create more sustainable gardens to help end world hunger, or at least dampen the dry crackling desert of starvation. According to https://sdgs.un.org/goals/goal2, the goal is to end world hunger at least for those who have vulnerable situations, including infants, nutritious, and sufficient food all year round.
“DNA research suggests a series of megadroughts from 135,000 to 70,000 years ago may have been responsible for the first migrations of early humans out of Africa.” “The number of undernourished people is growing faster on the African continent than anywhere else in the world. “ source “William Digby, a contemporary observer of the 1876 Madaras famine, wrote, “when the part played by the British empire in the nineteenth century is regarded by the historian fifty years hence, the unnecessary deaths of millions of Indians by its principal and the most notorious monument” empires of food (212)

all those quotes both show where this should target, but also how the drought affected the people and that it could’ve been avoided, had we better prepared ourselves.



Remember what caused early humans to spread out of Africa? Droughts!

Also, “The three longest drought episodes occurred between July 1928 and May 1942 (the 1930s Dust Bowl drought), July 1949 and September 1957 (the 1950s drought), and June 1998 and December 2014 (the early 21st-century drought).” source Well, we are certainly more prepared for drought, we should start making food reserves, especially in major cities. In history, droughts make madness occur, as well as desperation, starvation, and disorganization.


I think we should not just create food reserves, but also start making more farms available in cities, where there are food deserts (an area with access to food, but not nutritious food, more like fast food and unhealthy options with no alternative), like in Ron Finley’s ted talk that we watched earlier in class, he made a community garden in the middle of a food desert. It changed the way he thought and how others thought, especially kids who were being brought up in the food desert.


There have been moments where we weren’t prepared for drought, and we have seen the aftermath. We need to be better prepared. Food reserves can mean a lot of things, but I think of grocery stores having warehouses full of commodities, and other important foods, that won’t go bad. This will help prepare for the worst and help solve homelessness by offering jobs to the public.

The fact that we have made progress on this issue is amazing, but we can solve this issue if we all work together to try to create more farms in areas such as food deserts and places without any food at all. It will help with poverty and hunger, as it will supply new jobs and food sources to people who need it. I know I’m re-stating what I said before, but it’s a great benefit of my idea and it can work.

What can you do to help this cause? Can you plant a garden in your community?


source:
https://www.actionagainsthunger.org/world-hunger-facts-statistics

Source: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2019/05/5-droughts-that-changed-human-history/

Source https://www.worldhunger.org/world-hunger-and-poverty-facts-and-statistics/


“World Hunger: Key Facts and Statistics.” Actionagainsthunger.Com, ActionAgainstHunger.com, www.actionagainsthunger.org/world-hunger-facts-statistics. Accessed 24 May 2021.


“SDG 2.1.” Sdgs.Un.Org, sdgs.un.org/goals/goal2. Accessed 24 May 2021.




National Geographic Society. “Nationalgeographic.Com.” Hunger and War, national geographic, 15 Jan. 2020, www.nationalgeographic.org/article/hunger-and-war.




“Historical Drought.” Drought.gov, www.drought.gov/what-is-drought/historical-drought#:~:text=The%20three%20longest%20drought%20episodes,early%2021st%2Dcentury%20drought).

Fraser , Even D. G., and Andrew Rimas . Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, And the Rise and Fall of Civilizations. Free Press, 2010.

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