Completed
The National Academies Climate Security Roundtable (CSRT) is sponsored by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) and provides federal officials with a platform for direct, sustained engagement with non-federal experts on a wide range of climate security issues. The overall goal of the Roundtable's Food Systems workshop is to inform the U.S. Intelligence Community's ability to assess, understand, and anticipate the interactions between food systems and climate change that can create risks to U.S. national security interests.
Description
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will organize a workshop to explore the climate-related security risks that involve agriculture and food systems. The overall goal of the workshop will be to inform the U.S. Intelligence Community's ability to assess, understand, and anticipate the interactions between agriculture and food systems and climate change that can create risks to U.S. national security interests.
The workshop will apply an integrative framework, previously developed by the Climate Security Roundtable, that applies a systems perspective to analyzing climate security across a range of regional and topical contexts. This Agriculture and Food Systems workshop, specifically, will consider:
- The key climate security questions related to agriculture and food systems, in the context of U.S. national interests, and the appropriate bounds (in terms of geographic borders, societal sectors, spatial/ temporal scales, etc.) for analysis in each case.
- The key influencing factors and network interactions that link agriculture and food systems to climate-related security risk. These include underlying conditions; external influences and stressors; interactions between human and natural systems; and other factors.
- The indicators that can be used to assess and monitor climate-related security risks involving agriculture and food systems, and the pathways along which these risks can evolve.
- The critical analytic capacity and capabilities (e.g., data and information systems; tools and methodologies; collaborative relationships; fundamental research; etc.) needed to effectively assess, understand, and anticipate climate-related security risks involving agriculture and food systems.
Workshop activities would include, but not be limited to, plenary and small-group discussions with invited experts; examination of case studies; structured exercises to identify and describe indicators, pathways, and analytic capabilities.
Contributors
Committee
Chair
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Apurva Dave
Staff Officer
Morgan Monz
Staff Officer
Sponsors
Other, Federal
Staff
Morgan Monz
Lead
Apurva Dave
Lead
Major units and sub-units
Center for Health, People, and Places
Lead
Health and Medicine Division
Lead
Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences
Lead
Division on Earth and Life Studies
Lead
Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
Lead
Food and Nutrition Board
Lead
Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate
Lead
Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources
Lead
Intelligence Community Studies Board
Lead
Board on Environmental Change and Society
Lead
Earth Systems and Resources Program Area
Lead