Mapping social impacts of agricultural commodity trade onto the sustainable development goals

Author:

Schaafsma Marije12ORCID,Dreoni Ilda13,Ayompe Lacour Mody4,Egoh Benis N.4,Ekayana Dewa Putu56,Favareto Arilson78,Mumbunan Sonny59,Nakagawa Louise8,Ngouhouo‐poufoun Jonas1011,Sassen Marieke1213,Uehara Thiago Kanashiro1415,Matthews Zoe3

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography and Environmental Science University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Department of Environmental Economics Institute for Environmental Studies, VU Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

3. Department of Social Statistics and Demography University of Southampton Southampton UK

4. Department of Earth System Science University of California Irvine Irvine California USA

5. Center for Climate and Sustainable Finance, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences University of Indonesia Depok Indonesia

6. Center for Climate Finance and Multilateral Policy, Fiscal Policy Agency Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Indonesia Jakarta Indonesia

7. Center for Engineering, Modeling and Applied Social Sciences Universidade Federal do ABC Santo André Brazil

8. Brazilian Centre for Analysis and Planning Cebrap Sustainability São Paulo Brazil

9. World Resources Institute (WRI) Indonesia Jakarta Indonesia

10. International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Cameroon Yaoundé Cameroon

11. Congo Basin Institute (CBI) Yaoundé Cameroon

12. UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP‐WCMC) Cambridge UK

13. Plant Production Systems Group Wageningen University Wageningen the Netherlands

14. Environment and Society Programme Royal Institute of International Affairs London UK

15. Centre for Ethics, Transparency, Integricy and Compliance Studies (FGV‐Ethics) Fundacão Getulio Vargas, São Paulo School of Business Administration (EAESP) Brazil

Abstract

AbstractWhile international trade in agricultural commodities can spur economic development especially where governance is strong, there are also concerns about the local impacts of commodity production and their distribution on the environment and on people. The sustainable development goals (SDGs), though seeing trade as a means to support their achievement, recognise the need to address potential negative social and environmental impacts. It is therefore important to assess the contribution of international trade to the SDGs in commodity production areas. The environmental impacts of commodity production are widely acknowledged, but much less is known about its social impacts, and how this affects poverty reduction objectives across different dimensions. Impacts on human wellbeing and equity depend on a multitude of factors, including resources, systemic conditions and outputs of production. Through a broad literature review on soy, coffee, cocoa and palm oil, we show how studies have addressed different aspects of these factors and their impacts. The paper demonstrates how efforts by actors in global supply chains are related to a large number of SDGs and their targets. We link the social impacts and factors to the SDGs and a list of potential indicators and variables to guide operationalisation of assessments in new empirical studies.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Development,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

Reference309 articles.

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