Abstract:
Background: Academic research on food security in Inuit Nunangat and Alaska frequently adopts the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations’ working definition of food security and Western conceptualisations
of what it means to be ‘food secure’. However, in 2014, the Alaskan branch of the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) stated
that academic and intergovernmental definitions and understandings ‘are important, but not what we are talking about
when we say food security’. The organisation subsequently developed its own conceptualisation and definition: the
Alaskan Inuit Food Security Conceptual Framework (AIFSCF), which in 2020 received informal assent by ICC-Canada.
Aim: This protocol establishes a review strategy to examine how well academic research reflects Inuit conceptualisations
and understandings of food security, as outlined in the AIFSCF. Methods: Review structure and reporting will be completed
according to adapted RepOrting standards for Systematic Evidence Syntheses (ROSES) guidelines. A comprehensive
search strategy will be used to locate peer-reviewed research from Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and the Arctic
and Antarctic Regions (EBSCO) databases. Dual reviewer screening will take place at the abstract, title, and full-text
stages. Different study methodologies (qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods) will be included for review, on
the proviso that articles identify drivers of food security. An a priori coding framework will be applied by a single reviewer
to extract data on publication characteristics, methods and article aims. Deductive thematic content analysis will then
identify the frequency and precedence afforded within literature to the drivers and dimensions of food security identified
by the AIFSCF.