Working through Disaster Risk Management to Support Regional Food Resilience: A Case Study in North-Eastern Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Increasing Experiences of Food Insecurity
2. Case Study Context: Cairns, Australia
3. Methods
3.1. Literature Review
3.2. Case Study Set Up
3.3. Stakeholder Workshops
3.4. Stakeholder Survey (Online and Telephone Interviews)
3.5. Limitations in the Study
4. Results
4.1. Participant Characteristics—Workshops and Survey
4.2. Workshop Findings
4.2.1. Workshop 1 ‘Scoping Session’
- Local food access support: Improve the availability of platforms for accessing local food;
- Awareness: Emphasize a holistic appreciation of local food resilience in Cairns;
- Innovation support: Enable an online platform of local food resilience innovations;
- Dashboard use: Utilize the existing Cairns Disaster Dashboard for local food contingency;
- Communication: Communicate desired behavior changes; and
- Food bowl mapping: Map the local food options within the region’s food bowl.
4.2.2. Workshop 2 ‘Key Insights Session’
4.3. Survey Findings
4.3.1. Knowledge Verses Practice of Food Emergency Preparedness
4.3.2. Awareness of and Use of Local Food Options
4.3.3. Food Support and Services Based on Future Food-Shortage Scenarios
- Ensuring continuity of online ordering and delivery avenues;
- Delivering online and via food charities;
- Ensuring the flow of fresh fruit and vegetables;
- Accessing supermarkets outside of business hours;
- Building capacities to bulk order with bulk deliveries;
- Maintaining food stockpiles;
- Facilitating the connection between food sources and community members;
- Accessing information on affordable food sources and delivery options;
- Minimizing panic buying; and
- Centralizing coordination to reduce the duplication of efforts.
- Accessing networks engaged with emergency food supplies and food parcels;
- Connecting with online tools, apps and resources to help develop a planned response;
- Coordinating the emergency response to reduce duplication of efforts;
- Using kitchen facilities to mass produce food;
- Utilizing mobile catering units and vans;
- More planned and structured times for food shopping;
- Earlier interventions to reduce hoarding;
- Maintaining food stockpiles and bottled water;
- Accessing food via food delivery and servicing large numbers of people;
- Information about affordable food sources and delivery services;
- Information about community gardens;
- Emergency relief support;
- Getting the business district active as soon as possible; and
- Accessing more food information and action, including food handling and hygiene support.
- Supporting Buy Local campaigns;
- Accessing affordable fresh food;
- Allocating suitable land parcels to those who wish to grow food;
- Better procurement lines for food to inform contingency arrangements;
- Anticipating the needs of people who do not know how to get help or ask for help;
- Longer-term focus on sustainable solutions, capacity building, and resilience;
- Not just relying on the internet and mobile phones for communications and continuing messages about maintaining stockpiles;
- A reliance on emergency food aid is due to limited planning;
- Authoritative measures around food safety can be a hinderance; and
- Improved coordination and shared responses that also help to create options.
4.3.4. Accessing Local Food Options in the Future
4.3.5. Supporting Access to Local Food Options
5. Discussion
5.1. Connecting Local Food Access with Disaster Management for Resilience Priorities
5.1.1. Priority 1: Maintain and Grow Year-Round All-Hazards Understanding and Preparedness
- Disruption to food systems: The emptying of supermarket shelves and spiked periods of panic buying requires revised and emergency capacities for restocking supermarket shelves. Due to border closures, disruptions also include the loss of migrant labor [52,53], essential for harvesting Australian crops [54]. This has added to a loss of supply of food items, and price increases [55].
- Deepening inequalities: The loss of income from closures is deepening the inequalities experienced by those who are already subject to poverty conditions [56,57,58]. Increasingly, more people who are not ‘normally’ within the poverty bracket are experiencing those conditions, as reported by Foodbank Australia in 2020 [14]. In 2021, Foodbank Australia reported that one in every six Australian adults did not have enough to eat [59].
5.1.2. Priority 2: Fill Resilience Knowledge Gaps
5.1.3. Priority 3: Build Internal and External Adaptive Capacity and Capability
5.1.4. Priority 4: Build Active Community Engagement in Resilience Building
5.1.5. Priority 5: Focus on Communities Needing the Most Support
5.2. Policy Implications for Local Food Access and Disaster Management: Addressing the Changing Status of ‘Vulnerable’
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. “Accessing Local Food in Cairns”—Online Survey and Telephone Interview Questions
- Your Organization
- ○
- Aged Care
- ○
- Disability Services
- ○
- Aboriginal Support
- ○
- Youth Services
- ○
- Homeless Assistance
- ○
- Multicultural Assistance
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Babinda
- ○
- Bungalow/Portsmith
- ○
- Manoora/Manunda
- ○
- Northern Beaches
- ○
- Other
- ○
- 1–50
- ○
- 51–100
- ○
- 101–300
- ○
- 301–500
- ○
- More than 501
- ○
- Increasing
- ○
- Consistent
- ○
- Decreasing
- ○
- Food Access Options
- 2.
- Food Access Options
- ○
- Direct delivery of fresh produce (e.g., Real Food Network, Food for Thought, Community Growers FNQ)
- ○
- Direct from the farmer (e.g., visiting a local farm, Farmer Meets Foodie)
- ○
- Food markets (e.g., Rusty’s markets)
- ○
- Bulk wholesale food outlets (e.g., Community Food)
- ○
- Community gardens (e.g., Manoora Community Garden)
- ○
- Food sharing (e.g., Food is Free Facebook, Cairns library facilities seed saving and sharing)
- ○
- Emergency supply, food aid and volunteer organizations (e.g., OzHarvest, Community Growers FNQ)
- ○
- Home grown (e.g., household or workplace vegetable garden, household livestock)
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Direct delivery of fresh produce (e.g., Real Food Network, Food for Thought, Community Growers FNQ)
- ○
- Direct from the farmer (e.g., visiting a local farm, Farmer Meets Foodie)
- ○
- Food markets (e.g., Rusty’s markets)
- ○
- Bulk wholesale food outlets (e.g., Community Food)
- ○
- Community gardens (e.g., Manoora Community Garden)
- ○
- Food sharing (e.g., Food is Free Facebook, Cairns library facilities seed saving and sharing)
- ○
- Emergency supply, food aid and volunteer organizations (e.g., OzHarvest, Community Growers FNQ)
- ○
- Home grown (e.g., household or workplace vegetable garden, household livestock)
- ○
- Other
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
Direct delivery of fresh produce (e.g., Real Food Network, Food for Thought, Community Growers FNQ) | |||||
Direct from the farmer (e.g., visiting a local farm, Farmer Meets Foodie) | |||||
Food markets (e.g., Rusty’s markets) | |||||
Bulk wholesale food outlets (e.g., Community Food) | |||||
Community gardens (e.g., Manoora Community Garden) | |||||
Food sharing (e.g., Food is Free Facebook, Cairns library facilities seed saving and sharing) | |||||
Emergency supply, food aid and volunteer organizations (e.g., OzHarvest, Community Growers FNQ) | |||||
Home grown (e.g., household or workplace vegetable garden, household livestock) |
- 3.
- Support Options
Strongly Disagree | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | Strongly Agree | |
Our organization has the minimum 3-day emergency supply of food | |||||
Our organization knows how to access emergency food supplies | |||||
Our organization knows how to access disaster event information from the Cairns Regional Council |
Strongly Disagree | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | Strongly Agree | |
Our clients have the minimum 3-day emergency supply of food | |||||
Our clients know how to access emergency food supplies | |||||
Our clients know how to access disaster event information from the Cairns Regional Council |
- ○
- Support social connection activities and events (e.g., local food festivals)
- ○
- Map the local food access locations in the region
- ○
- Workshops on food preparation, nutrition, access and sharing
- ○
- Raise awareness of the need for accessing local food
- ○
- Build a broader community harden hub
- ○
- Develop an online platform of all local food access agencies, apps and groups
- ○
- Develop more community-food-sharing locations (e.g., food pantries)
- ○
- Show how to access emergency food options on the Cairns Disaster Dashboard
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Email
- ○
- Text message
- ○
- Letter box information sheets
- ○
- Local newspaper
- ○
- Television
- ○
- Radio
- ○
- Social media
- ○
- Cairns Regional Council website/Disaster Dashboard
- ○
- Public interactions (e.g., shopping center information booths)
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Email
- ○
- Text message
- ○
- Letter box information sheets
- ○
- Local newspaper
- ○
- Television
- ○
- Radio
- ○
- Social media
- ○
- Cairns Regional Council website/Disaster Dashboard
- ○
- Public interactions (e.g., shopping center information booths)
- ○
- Other
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Disaster Management Strategic Priority [37] | Mapped Local Food Access Priorities for Cairns (Workshop 1 Priority Action Areas) | |||||
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Transitory Food Insecurity: Some Examples of Common ‘Spiked’ Experiences from Disaster Impacts | Chronic Food Insecurity: Some Examples of Priority Vulnerable Members Living with Persistent Need for Support |
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Reis, K.; Desha, C.; Campbell, S.; Liddy, P. Working through Disaster Risk Management to Support Regional Food Resilience: A Case Study in North-Eastern Australia. Sustainability 2022, 14, 2466. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042466
Reis K, Desha C, Campbell S, Liddy P. Working through Disaster Risk Management to Support Regional Food Resilience: A Case Study in North-Eastern Australia. Sustainability. 2022; 14(4):2466. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042466
Chicago/Turabian StyleReis, Kimberley, Cheryl Desha, Sioux Campbell, and Prudence Liddy. 2022. "Working through Disaster Risk Management to Support Regional Food Resilience: A Case Study in North-Eastern Australia" Sustainability 14, no. 4: 2466. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042466
APA StyleReis, K., Desha, C., Campbell, S., & Liddy, P. (2022). Working through Disaster Risk Management to Support Regional Food Resilience: A Case Study in North-Eastern Australia. Sustainability, 14(4), 2466. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042466