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SL Paper 1

The map shows selected African countries suffering from severe food insecurity in 2017.

[Source: Courtesy Africa Center for Strategic Studies.]

Estimate the area of the country of Nigeria, in km2. Show your working.

[2]
a.

Outline one of the main components of the food security index.

[2]
b.

Explain two human factors that may have led to high food insecurity in countries such as those shown.

[6]
c.



Examine how food production systems can use water and energy more sustainably.

[10]
a.

Examine how different stakeholders influence the diets of individuals and societies.

[10]
b.



Examine ways in which people’s dietary choices are sometimes influenced by different types of transnational corporation (TNC).

[10]
a.

Examine the role of diffusion and barriers in the spread of disease. 

[10]
b.



The graph shows the total amount of food waste that is created each year in selected world regions with varying population growth rates.

[Source: © FAO. 2011. Page 5. Global food losses and food waste – Extent, causes and prevention.
https://www.fao.org/3/mb060e/mb060e.pdf. Reproduced with permission.]

State which world region has the least food waste created by food producers and shops.

[1]
a.i.

Estimate the amount of food waste, in billions of tonnes, created by consumers in North America.

[1]
a.ii.

Outline how vertical farming can help increase long-term global food availability.

[2]
b.

Explain two strengths of food waste reduction as a strategy to improve food security in the world regions shown on the graph.

[6]
c.



Examine how spatial variations in food consumption can impact upon life expectancy.

[10]
a.

Examine the reasons why food insecurity remains high in many places.

[10]
b.



The map shows the global pattern of type 2 diabetes (sometimes classified globally as a disease of affluence) in 2000 and the numbers of people affected by this disease in 2000 and 2030 (projected).

[Source: adapted from World Health Organization, Diabetes Action Now: An Initiative of the
World Health Organization and the International Diabetes Federation, WHO/IDF, page 8, 2004]

Identify the percentage of people affected by diabetes in Europe in 2000.

[1]
a.i.

State the region with the highest rate of increase in diabetes between 2000 and 2030.

[1]
a.ii.

Suggest two reasons, other than population growth, why the number of people suffering from diseases of affluence is projected to increase globally.

[4]
b.

Explain one global and one local action that could be undertaken to manage a pandemic such as diabetes.

[4]
c.



Examine the view that food waste reduction is the best way to achieve future food security.

[10]
a.

Examine the relative importance of physical and human factors in the diffusion over time of one vector-borne disease.

[10]
b.



The graph shows the incidence of dengue fever (a vector-borne disease) in an Asian country between 2010 and 2012 by age group.

[Source: Bracebridge, S., 2015. Age-specific dengue fever incidence rates, Taiwan, 2010–2012. [online] Available at:
https://figshare.com/articles/_Age_specific_dengue_fever_incidence_rates_Taiwan_2010_8211_2012_/1345062/1 
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence (https://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by/4.0/). [Accessed 6 May 2020]. Source adapted.]

State the age group which had the highest incidence of dengue fever in 2012.

[1]
a.i.

Estimate the mean incidence rate of dengue fever for all years in the 20–24 age group.

[1]
a.ii.

Outline one strategy used to limit the spread of a water-borne disease.

[2]
b.

Explain how using genetically modified organisms (GMOs) to increase food production can lead to one environmental disadvantage.

[3]
c.i.

Explain how using genetically modified organisms (GMOs) to increase food production can lead to one social disadvantage.

[3]
c.ii.



Examine the relative importance of prevention and treatment in limiting the spread of one or more diseases.

[10]
a.

Examine how governments and other stakeholders can affect the severity of famine.

[10]
b.



 

 [Source: Instituto Geográfico Nacional (IGN), 2013. Lima, Peru. Nasca, Peru, Series J731, Sheet 1941 3 (30 n 3), 1:50000. Lima: IGN. Source adapted.]

State the four-figure grid reference for the spot height of 1062 metres in the northeast of the map.

[1]
a.i.

Estimate the area, in km2 , of cultivated land to the west of easting 02.

[1]
a.ii.

Outline one way in which the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) could help increase food production from cultivated land.

[2]
b.

Explain one physical factor and one human factor contributing to the diffusion of one named water-borne disease through an area such as this.

[6]
c.



Examine how different factors have contributed to famine in one or more countries or areas.

[10]
a.

Examine possible ways to improve food availability in different places.

[10]
b.