Australia’s efforts to improve food security for aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Australia’s efforts to improve food security for aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Australia is a wealthy country; however, available evidence suggests that food security among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples has not yet been achieved. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples living in remote, regional, and urban parts of Australia experience food insecurity for a number of reasons that usually include low income and a lack of access to affordable and healthy food. The much higher rate of illness and disease that this population experiences compared to non-indigenous Australians is directly related to food insecurity. This paper examines the food insecurity among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and recent Australian government efforts to combat this problem. The paper first considers what constitutes a human rights-based approach to achieving food security. Second, it describes the food insecurity that currently exists among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples across the three pillars of food access, food availability, and food use. Third, the paper critically examines recent and current Australian government policy aimed at improving food security. The paper concludes with some reflections regarding how the Australian government can improve its efforts to achieve food security for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Davy, Deanna
f19cfbfe-1b22-4e66-b9d1-a816d0b64e58
1 December 2016
Davy, Deanna
f19cfbfe-1b22-4e66-b9d1-a816d0b64e58
Davy, Deanna
(2016)
Australia’s efforts to improve food security for aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.
Health and Human Rights, 18 (2).
Abstract
Australia is a wealthy country; however, available evidence suggests that food security among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples has not yet been achieved. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples living in remote, regional, and urban parts of Australia experience food insecurity for a number of reasons that usually include low income and a lack of access to affordable and healthy food. The much higher rate of illness and disease that this population experiences compared to non-indigenous Australians is directly related to food insecurity. This paper examines the food insecurity among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and recent Australian government efforts to combat this problem. The paper first considers what constitutes a human rights-based approach to achieving food security. Second, it describes the food insecurity that currently exists among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples across the three pillars of food access, food availability, and food use. Third, the paper critically examines recent and current Australian government policy aimed at improving food security. The paper concludes with some reflections regarding how the Australian government can improve its efforts to achieve food security for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
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hhr-18-209
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Published date: 1 December 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 506579
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506579
ISSN: 1079-0969
PURE UUID: 5e0021e9-4915-403c-9805-61fafad76cdd
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Date deposited: 11 Nov 2025 17:54
Last modified: 15 Nov 2025 03:26
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Deanna Davy
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