全球粮食安全与营养论坛 (FSN论坛)

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粮食安全与营养数据采集和分析工具——关于高专组指导委员会和项目团队拟定的报告预稿的在线磋商

During its 46th Plenary Session (14-18 October 2019), the Committee on World Food Security (CFS) adopted its four-year Programme of Work (MYPoW 2020-2023), which includes a request to the High-Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition (CFS-HLPE) to produce a report on “Data collection and analysis tools” for food security and nutrition, to be presented at the 50th Plenary session of the CFS in October 2022 (to access the MYPoW, please click here).

The report, which will provide recommendations to the CFS workstream “Data collection and analysis tools”, will:

  • Identify the barriers impeding quality data collection, analysis, and use in decision-making;
  • Identify specific high priority gaps in data production and analysis not covered by ongoing initiatives;
  • Highlight the benefits of using data and the opportunity costs of not using data for decisions;
  • Illustrate initiatives that have encouraged evidence-based decisions in agriculture and food security across the public, private, and academic sectors as well as approaches that have not worked;
  • Provide insights into how to ensure data collection and its utilization give voice to the people most affected by policies stemming from that data, including farmers and other food producers.

To implement this CFS request, the HLPE is launching an open e-consultation to seek views and comments on the V0 draft of the report

The report will be presented at CFS 50th Plenary session in October 2022. As part of the process of elaboration of its reports, the HLPE is organizing a consultation to seek inputs, suggestions, and comments on the present preliminary V0 draft (more details on the different steps of the process, are available here). The results of this consultation will be used by the HLPE to further elaborate the report, which will then be submitted to external expert review, before finalization and approval by the HLPE Steering Committee.

HLPE V0-drafts of reports are deliberately presented early enough in the process - as a work-in-progress, with their range of imperfections – to allow sufficient time to properly consider the feedbacks received in the elaboration of the report. E-consultations are a key part of the inclusive and knowledge-based dialogue between the HLPE Steering Committee and the knowledge community at large.

How can you contribute to the development of the report?

This V0 draft identifies areas for recommendations and contributions on which the HLPE would welcome suggestions or proposals. The HLPE would welcome contributions in particular addressing the following questions, including with reference to context-specific issues:

1. The V0-draft introduces a conceptual framework that orders the components of the food security and nutrition ecosystem based on their proximity to people’s immediate decision making sphere, from the macro to the individual levels, and describes a four-stage data-driven decision making cycle for food security and nutrition (FSN), from priority setting to data utilization. Use of the two is illustrated through a matrix template that facilitates the concurrent operationalization of the conceptual framework and data driven decision-making cycle to address issues relevant for FSN.

  1. Do you find the proposed framework an effective conceptual device to highlight and discuss the key issues affecting data collection and analysis for FSN?
  2. Do you think that this conceptual framework can indeed contribute to providing practical guidance for data collection for FSN?
  3. Do you think that this four-stage data driven decision making cycle for FSN addresses the key steps in the data collection and analysis process for FSN? Where do you see the more relevant bottlenecks in the data driven decision making cycle for FSN?
  4. Can you offer suggestions for examples that would be useful to illustrate in a matrix template that facilitates the operationalization of the conceptual framework and data driving decision-making cycle to address issues relevant for FSN?

2. The report adopts the broader definition of food security, proposed by HLPE in 2020, which includes the two dimensions of agency and sustainability, alongside the traditional four of availability, access, utilization and stability.

  1. Does the V0-draft cover sufficiently the implications of broadening the definition of food security for data collection, analysis and use?
  2. What type of data will be most useful in measuring food security dimensions such as “agency” and “sustainability”?

3. The V0-draft reviews existing FSN data collection and analysis tools, initiatives and trends.

  1. Do you think that the review adequately covers the existing ones? If not, what would you add?
  2. Do you think that the trends identified are indeed the key ones in affecting data generation, analysis and use for FSN? If not, which other trends should be taken into account?
  3. In particular, can you offer feedback on how digital technology, internet of things, artificial intelligence, big data, and agriculture 4.0 affect FSN? What is their likely impact in the coming decades?

4. The report discusses capacity constraints at local, national and global levels, with a special focus on statistical and analytical capacity.

  1. Do you think that the V0-draft covers all the issues – and their consequences - of capacity constraints at the different levels?
  2. If your answer a. was “no”, then what additional issues regarding capacity constraints should be added to the analysis?

5. The V0-draft discusses the role of new and emerging technologies in data collection and analysis tools for FSN.

  1. Do you think that the presentation of new and emerging technologies captures the main trends? What other new and emerging technologies could be discussed in the report?
  2. In what other ways can new and emerging technologies be relevant to each of the stages/aspects of the FSN data value chain/data lifecycle (i.e., Define evidence priorities and questions; Review, consolidate, collect, curate and analyze data; Translate and disseminate results and conclusions; Engage and use results and conclusions to make decisions)?
  3. In what other ways can new and emerging technologies be relevant to each of the FSN dimensions (i.e., Availability; Access; Utilization; Stability; Agency; Sustainability)?
  4. What are some of the issues with respect to ethical use of data, access, agency and ownership linked to these new and emerging technologies that should be further discussed in the report?

6. The report reviews issues concerning institutions and governance for data collection, analysis and use, with a focus on data governance principles, data protection, transparency and governance of official statistics, the implications for governance of an increasingly digitalized world, and examples of initiatives addressing governance challenges.

  1. Are there any issues concerning governance of data for FSN that have not been sufficiently covered in the draft report?
  2. What are some of the risks inherent in data-driven technologies for FSN? How can these risks be mitigated? What are some of the issues related to data privacy, access and control that should be carefully considered?
  3. What are the minimum requirements of an efficient FSN data system and how should these be prioritized?
  4. Which mechanism or organization should ensure good governance of data and information systems for FSN? How to regulate and mitigate potential conflicts between public and private ownership of data?
  5. What are the financing needs and the financial mechanisms and tools that should be established to allow all countries to collect, analyse and use FSN data?

7. Drawing on HLPE reports and analysis in the wider literature, in the next draft the report will outline examples of potential policy pathways to address challenges to data collection and analysis tools for FSN.

  1. What data do the global community and international organizations need in order to gain an appropriate insight into the current state of world food security and to agree on and design international action to improve it?
  2. What data do countries need for more effective decision-making for food security and nutrition and to inform policies for the transformation of food systems?
  3. Please suggest references to cases that illustrate policies and initiatives aimed at:
    • improving equity in access to data for FSN policies and decisions, including at grassroot and local levels;
    • enhancing capacities with respect to data generation, access, analysis and use by different actors;
    • specifically harnessing of traditional and indigenous/first nations knowledge.
  1. Please provide references and examples of success: good data leading to good policies (context-specific), or any lessons to be learned from a failed data collection/utilization attempt.
  2. Please also suggest any initiative and good practice aimed at addressing:
    • the specific constraints of generating a minimum set of indicators in conflict and disaster- affected areas;
    • capacity gaps of local institutions, farmers’, producers’ and workers’ organizations in generating, sharing and analysing good quality data, as well as in using data to inform decision-making in food systems;
    • capacity gaps at country level to generate and use data in policy-making processes, monitoring and reporting related to SDG2; including with respect to financial resources, human resources, data management, legislation and the enabling environment and FSN governance.
  1. Please also provide any additional references with respect to:
    • minimum data requirements (baseline) for FSN at country level;
    • qualitative data;
    • data representing traditional knowledge.

8. Please provide your feedback on the following:

  1. Are there any major omissions or gaps in the V0-draft?    
  2. Are topics under- or over-represented in relation to their importance?    
  3. Are there any redundant facts or statements that could be eliminated from the V0-draft?
  4. Are any facts or conclusions refuted, questionable or assertions with no evidence-base?

We thank in advance all the contributors for reading, commenting and providing inputs on this V0 draft of the report. We look forward to a rich and fruitful consultation!

The HLPE Steering Committee

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FIAN International is pleased to submit comments to the V0 Draft HLPE Report on "Data collection and analysis tools for food security and nutrition".

FIAN's comments focus on the need for incorporation of the right to food and nutrition as well as the broader human rights framework into the conceptual framework ans trhoughout the document. Our comments are attached.

Greetings colleagues and thank you for your hard work. I hope the attached comments will be helpful. In summary, I encourage the authors to: 1) adopt a more updated conceptual understanding of the link between information and policy; 2) clarify the relationships between food security (specifically, access to food at the individual or household level), food consumption, and nutritional outcomes (and the data and methodologies associated with each); 3) distinguish between global/regional data and decision-making and national/local data and decision-making; 4) incorporate discussions of the important contributions of qualitative/ethnographic/interpretivist research and data and of citizen science.

Best regards,

Anne Kepple

The Private Sector Mechanism (PSM) is pleased to participate in the e-consultation on the V0 draft of the HLPE report “Data collection and analysis tools for food security and nutrition.”  The PSM believes to effectively address the current gaps and challenges in agriculture productivity and income that help perpetuate food insecurity, there needs to be a growing recognition of the need for sharing of available, accessible and usable data for agriculture and nutrition.  This requires 1) an increase in investment in high quality agriculture; 2) the promotion of better, more actionable data; 3) through the use of new sources of data; 4) the creation of an enabling environment for increased data; and 5) the exchange of data for disaster risk reduction. 

With this in mind, the PSM can share the following input on the VO report which comes from its wide membership across the entire value chain; from farmers, to input providers, to cooperatives, processors, SMEs, and food companies.  To facilitate the HLPE work, please also accept the attached V0 draft converted into word which suggests additions and deletions, and where possible provides comments/rationale.    

  1. Firstly, we would like to note the overly negative tone in assessing the food system in the introduction.  While there is a need to identify the failings of the food system in many areas, there have also been successes which were evident during the COVID-19 pandemic and could be cited.  In a similar manner, a less than positive stance towards the private sector can be gleaned in some places, and its direct omission in many others. 
  2. The role of the private sector appears under-appreciated throughout the document, with very few positive mentions as an existing collaborator, source of technology or data.  Where private sector is mentioned, often the perspective is risk management versus a more embracing sentiment. We encourage those aspects of the report to be improved, with the understanding that expanding data collection and analysis needs to be a collaborative effort between governments, international agencies, the private sector, civil society and academia.  The openness of international agencies and governments to the inputs, ideas and advice from other sources is key.  As such, an environment of inclusiveness to solving potential data issues and allowing for their questioning and eventual correction should also be welcomed (see § 3.3.1, 5.1, 5.3, 5.4, 4.4.1, among other areas).
  3. The alignment of the document to the SDGs could be stronger, as harnessing the power of data is one of the most important tools for achieving the SDGs.  The PSM notes the report clearly highlights the lack of resources; however, identifying the topics where high quality and actionable data does not currently exist could lead to more impactful investments.  The PSM believes the primary focus of investment should be on the data necessary to track achievement towards the SDG indicators. 
  4. The role of the farmer in providing and not only consuming data, and the related needs/concerns could also be developed further.  The PSM looks forward to providing this insight during the upcoming process from a wider perspective, encompassing farms of all sizes, and addressing their related challenges. 

Thank you for the opportunity to become involved.

Maria Giulia De Castro

World Farmers' Organisation
Italy

Dear colleagues,

many thanks for providing us with the opportunity to participate in this e-consultation.

Please kindly find attached the written contribution from the World Farmers' Organisation (WFO), together with the comments prepared by the WFO Working Group on Food Security.

With kind regards,

Giulia

Dear HLPE Steering Committee and the Project Team,

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the V0 Draft of the report “Data collection and analysis tools for food security and nutrition”.

The Global Alliance for the Future of Food would like to suggest resources and references that could enhance the content of the report, particularly by contributing to consultation questions #3, #7, and #8. This contribution builds on recent work developed by the Global Alliance with several partners: i) the compendium “The Politics of Knowledge - Understanding the Evidence for Agroecology, Regenerative Approaches, and Indigenous Foodways”; ii) the report “True Value: Revealing the Positive Impacts of Food Systems Transformation”.

Among other issues, the compendium “Politics of Knowledge” revisits fundamental debates on how we understand and document evidence for FSN, and how dominant narratives shape concepts such as data validity, objectivity, and equity in data collection and analysis. It also debates how political power behind dominant narratives can marginalize diverse, non-western, and non-academic types of knowledge - for example those strongly associated with agroecology, regenerative approaches, and Indigenous foodways - forcing narrow views on how to measure success, performance, and resilience in FSN. The report “True Value” digs into a growing area of study in comprehensive metrics for food security, nutrition, and sustainability. Adopting a food systems approach as advocated by numerous HLPE studies, the report demonstrates how using qualitative data and assessment approaches alongside quantitative data and assessment approaches enables us to more clearly describe the interlinkages between actions and impacts, which is important to systems thinking and understanding the connections between systems elements.

Both studies call on us to encourage and embrace diverse forms of evidence to be generated, gathered, meaningfully considered, and communicated, thereby broadening the debate on data in a way that would, in our view, increase the richness of this forthcoming HLPE Report.

Please find our detailed contribution attached to this message.

Thank you for your consideration,



Global Alliance for the Future of Food

Lynda Hayden

Australian Embassy to Italy

We are pleased to provide the following comments and feedback on V0 Draft report on Data Collection and Analysis Tools for food security and nutrition. We thank the CFS HLPE and the report authors for providing this opportunity for review and we trust that our comments will help support the development of this important report.

General Australian comments

As an overarching comment, we consider that the report has only partially met its stated objectives. A primary issue in our view, relates to the generic nature of the included examples, however we hope that this consultation process will support the authors to provide more specificity when identifying and highlighting barriers, gaps and initiatives. We consider that the report may benefit from adopting a geographical lens, providing a summary of the main food and nutrition security data strengths and weaknesses from each region and scale. There is opportunity also for the authors to include thematic areas relevant to this topic – e.g., availability vs. consumption data. 

The report would benefit from a review of the structure and may find more cohesion by taking a systematic approach as currently we consider there are challenges with the way the information is presented. One option may be to follow the conceptual framework and data cycle of food security and nutrition. We found that Section 3 was particularly challenging with the same topics addressed under different subsections. This could be remedied by breaking the section into smaller groupings to help focus and target the narrative more clearly. While both Sections 3 and 4 cover innovative methods, there is some overlap that should be addressed. The generic nature of Section 4 should also be addressed, along with additional specificity that will help the reader understand food security and nutrition data throughout the data cycle. This could be alleviated by additional development of sub-section 4.3 which is helpfully presented in the framework of food and nutrition dimensions – though the nutrition information is missing. 

Section 3 would also benefit from a greater refocusing as the authors risk a report that covers all aspects of food system monitoring rather than drilling into food and nutrition security outcomes. For example, the discussion around SIS does not seem relevant to FSN data collection and analysis but on how AI can be used for food systems intervention. It is suggested the report provide greater clarity around whether the report is focusing also on food system data collection and analysis or, as the report title suggests, food and nutrition security data more specifically.

Additionally, in relation to the introductory statement that “food systems have failed us,” we believe that while recognising that our food systems must continue to adapt and do better, the report should also recognise the strengths of current food systems and what has been working well to date and can be built upon. We note that the report could benefit from further exploration of the considerable role that international trade (and related datasets) has for food security and nutrition outcomes.

As an editorial statement, we suggest that descriptors, tables, boxes, figures and table numbers be consistent throughout the report.

Section Specific Feedback 

Section 1

The conceptual framework put forward by the authors is sound. However, the matrix (figure 3) appears somewhat impractical and would benefit from harmonisation with the technology used in the conceptual framework. The example matrix (p.16) is troublingly generic with the potential for the content to be used to apply to almost any nutrition ‘problem’.

Detailed commentary:

The socio-ecosystem framework of food security is a good initiative as it captures the interrelated scales well. 

The data driven decision making cycle (figure 2) for FS though arguably best practice for any data collation exercise is quite generic. We would like to this better adapted to the FSN context.

We consider there to be some challenges with figure 3 that should be addressed:

  • The first column should correspond to the conceptual framework however, and unless this is referring to Meso or Proximal determinants (how the conceptual framework refers) ‘systems level’ is missing from the framework, otherwise we suggest that terminology should be harmonized. Additionally, the conceptual framework is unclear on whether individual level is the same as the micro level, or is the Personal, HH, Community decision making? Either way, these should be reviewed and consolidated.

Referencing all definition of evidence priorities in relation to ‘the identified problem’ is problematic and unclear. The primary aim of the template is defined as ‘to identify problems that require data’ (p.15) yet the approach of the matrix is unclear – whether it identify the problem or will the problem be identified upon completing the matrix? As a further complicating factor, in real-life situations there are often multiple problems which makes a single identifier challenging. Suggest re-working the language in the column defining evidence priorities.

We suggest allowing more space on p.15 to highlight the steps required prior to data collection. It is probable many people will not have this knowledge – particularly how to identify indicators that are known to be measurable and meaningful. This section may be strengthened with the inclusion of a figure/image to demonstrate. 

The first example (p.16) contains relatively generic information that could be used for most diet and/or nutrition problems. It appears to lack some specificity with the identified problem or the context. This is one example of the limited practical use of the matrix as proposed. 

Section 2

The authors may wish to revisit the readability of this section which, in terms of flow, was difficult to follow. To counter this, suggest the table be split up, and also summarized in the text as the text currently focuses on general challenges related to FSN data relevant to the data cycle concept. The section would benefit from comment on the methodology or inputs used to make this type of assessment which alleviate some of the issues with the generalised nature of the section.

While there is absolute value in detailing current initiatives, titling this section ‘Review’ ensures an expectation from the reader that these initiatives will have some critical commentary also. However, these initiatives seem to focus mainly on global data sets – suggest the section could be strengthened with the inclusion of initiatives that collect national or subnational data. If the report is interested only in global FSN data initiatives this should be defined somewhere for the reader. Otherwise, recommend including the opportunity for other initiatives to be suggested for inclusion and review – for example, the FAO GIFT initiative and the global burden of disease study.

Section 3 

As with feedback for Section 2, the authors may wish to revisit the readability of this section and the structure to avoid the lack of current cohesion and, for this section, the duplicative nature of the information provided. Additionally, we recommend the report ensure consistency of terminology – in this section data cycle and data value chain are used interchangeably. 

We recommend broadening the section on policy decisions references seem to focus on agriculture and trade along with the current emphasis on diets/health.

Given the current environment, suggest authors acknowledge the impact Covid-19 has had on data collection – i.e., the reduction in face-to-face modalities, the increased pressure on already limited capacity, the need to shift to more mobile surveys and what that means for data reliability especially when trying to target the most food and nutrition security vulnerable.

We recommend the text in box 3 be either reincorporated back into the main text or the focus of the narrative sharpened. At the moment, it is unclear whether the intent is to highlight the high cost of FSN data or the impact of these high costs. We suggest the same for box 4 – there is too much text and the box does not adequately highlight how critical this information is to the report. 

The section could be improved by identifying the constraint per section of the data cycle – i.e., collection, analysis, interpretation, dissemination and use. While the challenges are similar (i.e., financial, human resource) they have different implications at the different stages. It would be good to see this incorporated into the section. Additionally, the section appears to focus on constraints of household/individual data collection at the expense of exploring data collection at the other scales presented in the conceptual framework. Perhaps restructuring this particular section to identify the financial and human resources costs as the main constraints of the data cycle before exploring the how this impacts the quality and usability of the data produced would be of benefit.

We recommend that insufficient data and data quality issues have its own sub-heading in the section. Currently, this flows with the previous subsection which is focused on the resource constraints to data collection.

Suggest expanding the section on advanced technologies to include those specific to measuring food and nutrition security rather than limiting the section to the production aspect of food systems.

Section 4

While subsection 4.3 addresses new technologies for data, it lacks specificity with regards to FSN data and would benefit from further development. As with above, nutrition is also missing from the food and nutrition dimensions of the framework. 

It is unclear how tables 1 and 2 differ as they both aim to present initiatives that address some aspect of FSN data through the data cycle. The way table 1 is titled, it could easily include the information in table 2. There is potential to consider consolidation – for instance with tables 2 and 3 being combined.

Section 5

We recommend further development of this section.

Having read through the other comments and realized that there is significant contestation surrounding the extension of the food security concept to agency and sustainability, I would like to add one more comment. The report fortunately applies this extended concept of food security, originally suggested by the HLPE-CFS itself.

While conceptualizing food security through global models, based on comprehensive data-sets, the anchoring of these models in bottom-up participatory approaches is crucial, not only in regard the reliability of the data, but also in regard the framing of the problems and the inherent assumptions in the models (cf: Kaiser et al 2021; Saltelli et al 2020).

Ref.:

Kaiser, M., Goldson, S., Buklijas, T., Gluckman, P., Allen, K., Bardsley, A., Lam, M.E. (2021). «Towards Post-Pandemic Sustainable and Ethical Food Systems”. Food Ethics, 6:4; https://doi.org/10.1007/s41055-020-00084-3

Saltelli, A., Benini, L., Funtowicz, S., Giampietro, M., Kaiser, M., Reinert, E., & van der Sluijs, J. P. (2020). The technique is never neutral. How methodological choices condition the generation of narratives for sustainability. Environmental Science & Policy, 106, 87-98.