Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/3871
Title: Gateway to the perspectives of the Food-Energy-Water nexus
Authors: Murthy, Ganti S.
Keywords: Ecosystems;Motivation;Waste management;Analytical methodology;Ecosystem health;Institutional change;Learning process;Research funding;Resource management;Systematic Review;Water resource securities;Water resources;fertilizer;analytical method;energy use;food security;interdisciplinary approach;life cycle analysis;research work;resource management;trend analysis;water supply;crop;decision support system;ecosystem;energy consumption;energy resource;environmental policy;environmental sustainability;food security;government;human;life cycle assessment;priority journal;resource management;Review;Saudi Arabia;systematic review;water supply;wheat
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Elsevier B.V.
Citation: Proctor, K., Tabatabaie, S. M. H., & Murthy, G. S. (2021). Gateway to the perspectives of the food-energy-water nexus. Science of the Total Environment, 764 doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142852
Abstract: The Food-Energy–Water (FEW) nexus has been promoted as a tool for improving food, energy, and water resource security via an interdisciplinary approach that acknowledges the inherent synergies and tradeoffs involved in managing these resources. Over the past decade discussion of the nexus has increased rapidly, along with research funding and output. However, because the nexus encompasses so many different disciplines, researchers engage with and study the nexus from differing perspectives with distinct motivations and analytical methodologies. Understanding these motivations is critical to understanding the value of a given work. This paper first uses a narrative review to identify the motivations and toolsets of five key perspectives used to view the nexus, including: ecosystem health, waste management, public and private institutional change, stakeholder trust, and the learning process. Then, a systematic review is conducted to examine how publication trends have changed over the past decade, both generally and for each of these perspectives. The Food-Energy-Water nexus is not the first systems-based approach for addressing resource management and critiques of the nexus as a “Buzzword” or simply a reinvention of previous systems are growing in the literature. Challenging authors to explicitly define the role and motivations of their research within the broader category of the FEW nexus can improve the actionability of the research, better allow researchers to build from each other's work, and help reduce the ambiguity surrounding the nexus. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142852
https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/3871
ISSN: 0048-9697
Type of Material: Review
Appears in Collections:Department of Biosciences and Biomedical Engineering

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