Scoping potential routes to UK civil unrest via the food system: results of a structured expert elicitation

Date

2023-10-12

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Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

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Type

Article

ISSN

2071-1050

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Jones A, et al., (2023) Scoping potential routes to UK civil unrest via the food system: results of a structured expert elicitation. Sustainability, Volume 15, Issue 20, October 2023, Article number 14783.

Abstract

We report the results of a structured expert elicitation to identify the most likely types of potential food system disruption scenarios for the UK, focusing on routes to civil unrest. We take a backcasting approach by defining as an end-point a societal event in which 1 in 2000 people have been injured in the UK, which 40% of experts rated as “Possible (20–50%)”, “More likely than not (50–80%)” or “Very likely (>80%)” over the coming decade. Over a timeframe of 50 years, this increased to 80% of experts. The experts considered two food system scenarios and ranked their plausibility of contributing to the given societal scenario. For a timescale of 10 years, the majority identified a food distribution problem as the most likely. Over a timescale of 50 years, the experts were more evenly split between the two scenarios, but over half thought the most likely route to civil unrest would be a lack of total food in the UK. However, the experts stressed that the various causes of food system disruption are interconnected and can create cascading risks, highlighting the importance of a systems approach. We encourage food system stakeholders to use these results in their risk planning and recommend future work to support prevention, preparedness, response and recovery planning.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

food systems, global catastrophic risk, climate change, extreme weather, ecological collapse, scenarios, cascading risks

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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