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Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation

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Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation. / Conti, Costanza; Hall, Andy; Moallemi, Enayat A. et al.
In: Global Food Security, Vol. 44, 100833, 31.03.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Conti, C, Hall, A, Moallemi, EA, Laila, A, Bene, C, Fanzo, J, Gibson, MF, Gordon, L, Hicks, C, Kok, K, Rao, N, Laxminarayan, R & Mason-D'Croz, D 2025, 'Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation', Global Food Security, vol. 44, 100833. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833

APA

Conti, C., Hall, A., Moallemi, E. A., Laila, A., Bene, C., Fanzo, J., Gibson, M. F., Gordon, L., Hicks, C., Kok, K., Rao, N., Laxminarayan, R., & Mason-D'Croz, D. (2025). Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation. Global Food Security, 44, Article 100833. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833

Vancouver

Conti C, Hall A, Moallemi EA, Laila A, Bene C, Fanzo J et al. Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation. Global Food Security. 2025 Mar 31;44:100833. Epub 2025 Feb 13. doi: 10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833

Author

Conti, Costanza ; Hall, Andy ; Moallemi, Enayat A. et al. / Top-down vs bottom-up processes : A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation. In: Global Food Security. 2025 ; Vol. 44.

Bibtex

@article{78b27b49de5d4e3980c189f03d4d446b,
title = "Top-down vs bottom-up processes: A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation",
abstract = "Urgent calls for food system transformation have spurred a variety of responses globally. In some cases, these calls have been answered through top-down led processes, driven by public agencies to design and implement measures that can drive societies towards more viable patterns of development. In other cases, transformation processes have been ignited by community level actors who addressed sustainability issues with context-specific solutions. The broad range of actors raises the question of whether it is top-down or bottom-up processes and actors that are better placed to deliver the fundamental and system level changes that characterise transformation. Through a systematic review, we identified 40 case studies across 24 countries to investigate the role of top-down or bottom-up processes in transformation, whether the two might intertwine, and with what results. We propose five different types of interactions: Autonomous Bottom-Up, Collaborative Bottom-Up, Top-Down Struggles and Resourceful Bottom-Up, Collaborative Top-Down and Transformation Alliances. Based on our analysis, we propose a new heuristic of roles and interactions between different actors. We suggest a shift from dichotomic views on top-down and bottom-up actor roles towards the concept of “transformation functions,” which would re-centre the discussion around the existing or needed capabilities for transformation in different contexts. Finally, we call for further research to determine how different transformation functions need to become more synchronised -or coordinated-to accelerate transformation.",
author = "Costanza Conti and Andy Hall and Moallemi, {Enayat A.} and Amar Laila and Christophe Bene and Jessica Fanzo and Gibson, {Matthew Ford} and Line Gordon and Christina Hicks and Kristiaan Kok and Nitya Rao and Ramanan Laxminarayan and Daniel Mason-D'Croz",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
journal = "Global Food Security",
issn = "2211-9124",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Top-down vs bottom-up processes

T2 - A systematic review clarifying roles and patterns of interactions in food system transformation

AU - Conti, Costanza

AU - Hall, Andy

AU - Moallemi, Enayat A.

AU - Laila, Amar

AU - Bene, Christophe

AU - Fanzo, Jessica

AU - Gibson, Matthew Ford

AU - Gordon, Line

AU - Hicks, Christina

AU - Kok, Kristiaan

AU - Rao, Nitya

AU - Laxminarayan, Ramanan

AU - Mason-D'Croz, Daniel

PY - 2025/3/31

Y1 - 2025/3/31

N2 - Urgent calls for food system transformation have spurred a variety of responses globally. In some cases, these calls have been answered through top-down led processes, driven by public agencies to design and implement measures that can drive societies towards more viable patterns of development. In other cases, transformation processes have been ignited by community level actors who addressed sustainability issues with context-specific solutions. The broad range of actors raises the question of whether it is top-down or bottom-up processes and actors that are better placed to deliver the fundamental and system level changes that characterise transformation. Through a systematic review, we identified 40 case studies across 24 countries to investigate the role of top-down or bottom-up processes in transformation, whether the two might intertwine, and with what results. We propose five different types of interactions: Autonomous Bottom-Up, Collaborative Bottom-Up, Top-Down Struggles and Resourceful Bottom-Up, Collaborative Top-Down and Transformation Alliances. Based on our analysis, we propose a new heuristic of roles and interactions between different actors. We suggest a shift from dichotomic views on top-down and bottom-up actor roles towards the concept of “transformation functions,” which would re-centre the discussion around the existing or needed capabilities for transformation in different contexts. Finally, we call for further research to determine how different transformation functions need to become more synchronised -or coordinated-to accelerate transformation.

AB - Urgent calls for food system transformation have spurred a variety of responses globally. In some cases, these calls have been answered through top-down led processes, driven by public agencies to design and implement measures that can drive societies towards more viable patterns of development. In other cases, transformation processes have been ignited by community level actors who addressed sustainability issues with context-specific solutions. The broad range of actors raises the question of whether it is top-down or bottom-up processes and actors that are better placed to deliver the fundamental and system level changes that characterise transformation. Through a systematic review, we identified 40 case studies across 24 countries to investigate the role of top-down or bottom-up processes in transformation, whether the two might intertwine, and with what results. We propose five different types of interactions: Autonomous Bottom-Up, Collaborative Bottom-Up, Top-Down Struggles and Resourceful Bottom-Up, Collaborative Top-Down and Transformation Alliances. Based on our analysis, we propose a new heuristic of roles and interactions between different actors. We suggest a shift from dichotomic views on top-down and bottom-up actor roles towards the concept of “transformation functions,” which would re-centre the discussion around the existing or needed capabilities for transformation in different contexts. Finally, we call for further research to determine how different transformation functions need to become more synchronised -or coordinated-to accelerate transformation.

U2 - 10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833

DO - 10.1016/j.gfs.2025.100833

M3 - Journal article

VL - 44

JO - Global Food Security

JF - Global Food Security

SN - 2211-9124

M1 - 100833

ER -