Our Hungry Planet: Agriculture, People and Food Security - University of Reading

Course

Online

Free

Description

  • Type

    Course

  • Methodology

    Online

Consider how the food we grow, buy, eat and throw away relates to the global issue of food security, with this free online course.

Questions & Answers

Add your question

Our advisors and other users will be able to reply to you

Who would you like to address this question to?

Fill in your details to get a reply

We will only publish your name and question

Emagister S.L. (data controller) will process your data to carry out promotional activities (via email and/or phone), publish reviews, or manage incidents. You can learn about your rights and manage your preferences in the privacy policy.

Reviews

Subjects

  • IT
  • IT Security
  • Security
  • Global

Course programme

Food security is a complex, global issue, in which we all play a part. In this free online course, you’ll join experts from the School of Agriculture, Policy and Development at the University of Reading, to investigate our relationship with agriculture and your own food habits.



Meet food producers around the world

We’ll take you on a journey around the world from Europe to Africa to Asia. Over six weeks, we’ll find out more about the challenges of growing crops and managing livestock at the regional, national, community and household level.



We’ll focus on the experience of family farmers (who produce 80% of the world’s food) in rural and urban settings in Uganda and the UK, asking:




    • What are the key issues facing producers and consumers of food, and how do they compare?

    • What factors influence the way we grow, process, package, transport and consume food?

    • How does agriculture - and its wide-ranging impacts in these different regions - relate to us?

    • And how does the food we grow, buy, eat and throw away relate to global food security issues?



Consider your own role in global food security

Each week, we’ll invite you to take part in activities that will help you reflect on your own food habits, including keeping a food waste diary; analysing your weekly shop; and sharing your experiences of food and farming in your community.



Despite the fact that the world is no longer short of food, about 842 million people remain chronically hungry because they cannot afford to eat. In this context, you’ll understand how your preferences - and those of a myriad of other actors in the food system - impact on our global quest for food security.



To find out more about some of the issues covered in this course, read Andrew Ainslie’s post for the FutureLearn blog: “Why are dairy farmers taking to the streets in protest?”



Further your studies

Our Hungry Planet provides a taster of The University of Reading’s MSc in Food Security and Development.



Our Hungry Planet: Agriculture, People and Food Security - University of Reading

Free