@article{Kenny_Wesche_Fillion_MacLean_Chan_2018, title={Supporting Inuit food security: A synthesis of initiatives in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, Northwest Territories}, volume={5}, url={https://canadianfoodstudies.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/cfs/article/view/213}, DOI={10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i2.213}, abstractNote={<p>Food insecurity among Indigenous Peoples of northern Canada is a significant public health issue that is exacerbated by changing social and environmental conditions. While a patchwork of programs, strategies and polices exist, the extent to which they address all “pillars” of food security (food <em>availability</em>, <em>access</em>, <em>quality</em>, and <em>utilization</em>) remains under-assessed. We respond to this gap by providing a framework for synthesizing and assessing information about food security initiatives, using a case study of the Inuvialuit Settlement Region (ISR), the westernmost Inuit region of Canada. Our objectives are: (1) to identify existing initiatives in the ISR; (2) to assess the breadth and diversity of these initiatives in addressing the four key food security “pillars”; and (3) to present an analytical framework that will facilitate ongoing data updating and sharing in the ISR and elsewhere. Through a scoping review and direct consultation with 12 key informants, we identified 30 initiatives that support food security in the ISR. These are funded and implemented at a range of national, territorial, regional, and local levels, and include both governmental and non-governmental programs, strategic frameworks, and research and monitoring initiatives. Seven key themes emerged from the cross-scale analysis of these initiatives, including: orientation with respect to food security pillars, scope and scale, demographic targeting, funding, monitoring and evaluation, and implications for food security strategies. While our framework provides a useful tool for data synthesis and analysis, its outputs can help in identifying gaps and opportunities for both resource allocation and program and policy development for under-served communities. Significantly, this study highlights the importance of engaging local perspectives in the development of coordinated approaches to address Inuit food insecurity.</p>}, number={2}, journal={Canadian Food Studies / La Revue canadienne des études sur l’alimentation}, author={Kenny, Tiff-Annie and Wesche, Sonia D and Fillion, Myriam and MacLean, Jullian and Chan, Hing Man}, year={2018}, month={May}, pages={73–110} }