South Africa’s multiple vulnerabilities, food security and livelihood options in the COVID-19 new order: An annotation
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Date
2021Author
Patrick, Hosea O.
Khalema, Ernest N.
Abiolu, Oluremi A.
Ijatuyi, Enioluwa J.
Abiolu, Rhoda T.
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The advent of the COVID-19 pandemic and its crippling effects exacerbate many people’s
vulnerability to food security across the world, including Africa. This article offers an
explorative discourse on the implication of COVID-19 pandemic for South Africa’s food and
livelihood security in the face of climate change. Using a scoping desktop review method, the
article aims to provoke research and policy action and discourse on the subject matter. The
article explores pre-and post-COVID-19 vulnerabilities in South Africa. It acknowledges the
impact of climate change on food security and the situation of food security in South Africa
pre-and post-COVID-19 pandemic. It then provides policy recommendations and expected
outcomes to reconfigure the agricultural sector in the new sociopolitical and economic order
necessitated by the pandemic. The article argues that reducing the stress posed by COVID-19
will require collaborative efforts and systemic thinking by stakeholders across all quarters.
This will proffer workable solutions to mitigate the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic
on the food and livelihood options of rural dwellers in South Africa and their interconnectedness
with the impact of climate change.
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- TD: 2021 Volume 17 [42]