Environmental Degradation: Challenge to Food Security, local context global perspective, A case study of a village in Bangladesh

Type Journal Article - American Journal of Engineering Research (AJER)
Title Environmental Degradation: Challenge to Food Security, local context global perspective, A case study of a village in Bangladesh
Author(s)
Volume 2
Issue 6
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 42-48
URL http://www.ajer.org/papers/v2(6)/G0264248.pdf
Abstract
Water, land and lights are three important and integral parts of food production. Pollute land, water and inadequate light/energy have sequential negative affects on total food and yield production. Bangladesh called the land of water as many as 310 rivers crisscross all over the country and source of surface water use. However, these natural resource base has been neglected in policy as a result many rivers in the country are about to dead and some are biologically dead because of anthropologic cause. Further, irrigation water used from this river and direct disposal of industrial chemicals and other waste polluted the land and reduces productivity and seems to ominous link to food insecurity. The present paper focuses and try to explore land and water pollution and its relationship with food security. The findings and outcomes of this paper is a research in a riverside village in Bangladesh and the methodology used for this study are focus group discussion (FGD), individual interview, observations, secondary information and review of literature.

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