International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture, Food Security & Public Health on March 22-24, 2027 in Pattaya, Thailand - Conference Index

International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture, Food Security & Public Health on March 22-24, 2027 in Pattaya, Thailand

International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture, Food Security & Public Health March 22, 2027 - Pattaya, Thailand

The idea of BANGKOK 9th International Conference on “Sustainable Agriculture, Food Security & Public Health" (SAFSPH-27) scheduled on March 22-24, 2027 Bangkok (Thailand) is for the researchers, scientists, scholars, engineers and parctitioners from all around the world to present and share ongoing research activities. This conference provides opportunities for the delegates to exchange new ideas and application experiences face to face, to establish business or research relations and to find global partners for future collaboration.

SAFSPH-27 is sponsored by Excellence in Research & Innovation (EIRAI).

Call for papers/Topics

Topics of interest for submission include any topics related to:

1. Independent Core Disciplines

These represent the foundational pillars of each distinct field before they intersect with one another.

Sustainable Agriculture (Environmental & Agronomic Foundations)

Agroecology and Soil Health: Cover cropping, conservation tillage, soil microbiome management, and nutrient cycling.

Water Resource Management: Drip irrigation, rainwater harvesting, and agricultural runoff mitigation.

Crop and Livestock Management: Integrated Pest Management (IPM), crop rotation, genetic diversity in seeds, and rotational grazing.

Renewable Energy in Farming: Solar-powered irrigation, biomass production, and electric farm machinery.

Food Security (Availability, Access, & Utilization Foundations)

Food Availability and Supply Chains: Global crop yields, post-harvest storage solutions, and logistics of food distribution.

Economic Access and Affordability: Food pricing mechanisms, agricultural subsidies, poverty alleviation, and social safety nets.

Food Utilization and Stability: Dietary diversity, clean water access for food preparation, and resilience to seasonal or climate-driven food shortages.

Public Health (Epidemiology & Systemic Wellness)

Nutritional Epidemiology: The study of dietary patterns, malnutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, and chronic diet-related diseases.

Environmental Health: Exposure to environmental toxins, air and water quality, and vector-borne disease dynamics.

Epidemiology and Disease Control: Infectious disease tracking, immunization, and healthcare infrastructure management.

Health Policy and Education: Public wellness campaigns, health literacy, and national healthcare resource allocation.

2. Interrelated Cross-Disciplinary Fields

These subtopics exist at the intersections where two of these primary fields overlap and directly influence each other.

Sustainable Agriculture + Food Security (The Yield & Resilience Nexus)

Climate-Resilient Crop Development: Breeding drought-tolerant and pest-resistant crops to secure long-term food supplies.

Sustainable Intensification: Methods to increase food production per unit of land without degrading the underlying ecosystems.

Localized Food Systems: Urban agriculture, vertical farming, and community-supported agriculture (CSA) to reduce transport vulnerabilities.

Food Waste Mitigation: Upcycling agricultural byproducts and optimizing harvesting techniques to preserve total caloric yields.

Food Security + Public Health (The Nutritional Well-being Nexus)

Malnutrition and Stunting: Addressing undernutrition, wasting, and developmental delays caused by insecure food access.

The Double Burden of Malnutrition: The co-existence of undernutrition along with obesity and overweight characteristics within the same community or individual.

Food Fortification: Enhancing staple foods with essential vitamins and minerals (e.g., iodized salt, iron-fortified flour) to combat widespread deficiencies.

Food Safety and Foodborne Illnesses: Regulating pathogens, chemical contaminants, and biological hazards in food storage and preparation.

Sustainable Agriculture + Public Health (The Eco-Health Nexus)

Agrochemical Toxicology: Assessing the human health impacts of chronic exposure to synthetic pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers.

Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): The public health risks stemming from the overuse of antibiotics in livestock and aquaculture.

Zoonotic Disease Prevention: Managing the livestock-wildlife interface to prevent the spillover of viruses from animals to humans.

Occupational Health for Farmers: Mitigating physical hazards, respiratory illnesses, and toxic exposures among agricultural laborers.

3. Advanced Multi-Disciplinary Subtopics

These complex fields merge all three disciplines to address comprehensive global challenges.

One Health Approach: A collaborative framework integrating veterinary medicine (agriculture), human medicine (public health), and environmental science to optimize health outcomes across all systems.

Sustainable Dietary Guidelines: Policy frameworks that recommend diets that are both nutritionally adequate for public health and have a low environmental footprint (e.g., planetary health diets).

Climate Change Adaption and Nutritional Security: Analyzing how rising atmospheric $CO_2$ levels alter the nutrient density of major staple crops, impacting global public health metrics and requiring adaptive farming interventions.

Regenerative Food Systems and Pandemic Resilience: Designing regional agricultural networks that actively restore ecosystem services, insulate local populations from global supply shocks, and eliminate conditions that breed zoonotic outbreaks

Name: FFABS
Website: http://ffabs.org

Related Events