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Sustainability Recommendations and Practices in School Feeding: A Systematic Review

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Correspondence: [email protected] (A.R.); [email protected] (R.B.A.B.)

Received 2021 Dec 8; Accepted 2022 Jan 4; Collection date 2022 Jan.

Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).

Considering the importance of schools for sustainable food offers and the formation of conscientious citizens on sustainability, this systematic review aimed to verify the recommendations on sustainability in school feeding policies and the sustainability practices adopted in schools. The research question that guided this study is “what are the recommendations on sustainability in school feeding policies and the sustainability practices adopted in schools?”. This systematic review was prepared according to PRISMA, and its checklist was registered in PROSPERO. Specific search strategies for Scopus, Web of Science, Pubmed, Lilacs, Google Scholar, and ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global were developed. The included studies’ methodological quality was evaluated using the Meta-Analysis Statistical Assessment and Review Instrument (MASTARI). A total of 134 studies were selected for a full reading. Of these, 50 met the eligibility criteria and were included in the systematic review. Several sustainability practices were described. The most cited are school gardens and education activities for sustainability. However, actions carried out in food services were also mentioned, from the planning of menus and the purchase of raw materials (mainly local and organic foods, vegetarian/vegan menus) to the distribution of meals (reduction of organic and inorganic waste: composting, recycling, donating food, and portion sizes). Recommendations for purchasing sustainable food (organic, local, and seasonal), nutrition education focused on sustainability, and reducing food waste were frequent; this reinforces the need to stimulate managers’ view, in their most varied spheres, for the priority that should be given to this theme, so that education for sustainability is universally part of the curricula. The importance of education in enabling individuals to promote sustainable development is reaffirmed in Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4). The development of assessment instruments can help monitor the evolution of sustainable strategies at schools and the main barriers and potentialities related to their implementation.

Keywords: school feeding, school meals, sustainability

1. Introduction

School feeding programs, widely spread across the globe, are recognized as an essential strategy for achieving goals in various sectors of society, including education, health, social protection, and agriculture. Recognized as the most prominent social protection network globally, even with the effects suffered by the COVID-19 pandemic, they appear as a robust investment in human capital that will guarantee the economic growth of nations [ 1 ]. The relationship between school feeding and educational and nutritional outcomes is widely investigated in the literature [ 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]. However, more recently, its role in conducting actions aimed at sustainability has been studied to mitigate the global challenges that threaten human and planet health in the 21st century [ 6 , 7 , 8 ].

A product of the concern with the environmental impacts derived from the world pattern of production and consumption in the second half of the 20th century, the term sustainable development refers to satisfying the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs [ 9 ]. Integrating the sustainability pillars is necessary to increase productive potential, guaranteeing equal opportunities for all without putting the environment at risk [ 10 ]. The three main pillars (environmental, economic, and social) have been studied for years, and, recently, the cultural and health pillars were also linked to sustainability [ 11 ].

Through school meals and educational practices, students become aware of the impacts of individual and collective choices [ 6 , 12 , 13 , 14 ], consequently generating better environmental, economic, and social outcomes. The essential role of education for achieving a more sustainable future in environmental, economic, and social aspects was recognized by the United Nations in the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development, which aimed to integrate the values, principles, and practices of sustainable development in all aspects of education [ 15 ]. Therefore, education for sustainability is a powerful tool capable of providing the knowledge, skills, and awareness needed by young people to deal with the various problems that threaten the integrity of the planet and human health and well-being [ 16 ]. In this sense, it is essential to conduct a process that considers, in addition to global issues, those that are local and common to the participants’ routine and that integrates a holistic perspective, allowing for informed decision-making, individually or collectively [ 15 , 17 ]. The literature also highlights the importance of using school meals as a tool for nutritional education and education for sustainable consumption and practical learning activities, such as school gardens, cooking activities, and field visits to small local farmers [ 6 , 12 , 18 , 19 , 20 ].

The relationship between sustainability and school feeding also occurs at the level of decisions made at all stages of meal production. It is known that food production is associated with significant environmental impacts. Although elements before or after the meals’ preparation are responsible for most of these effects (such as field production, transport, and food waste) [ 21 , 22 , 23 ], the choices made by school food services influence this dynamic, determining the degree to which they employ actions to mitigate the environmental impacts generated in this process. Some examples are the purchase of organic and local food, encouraging the consumption of fresh vegetables at meals, controlling the supply of meat, and actions such as adjusting portions, donating food, composting, purchasing products with minimum packaging, recycling, and reducing energy and water consumption [ 24 , 25 , 26 , 27 , 28 , 29 , 30 ].

The adoption of sustainable practices often generates results that simultaneously reach the different dimensions of sustainability. Reducing energy and water consumption in the production of meals and adjusting the size of food portions, for example, can represent actions of economic and environmental sustainability [ 29 ]. Also, the donation of food, raw or prepared, provided that it is in perfect hygienic and sanitary condition, can be observed from social and environmental sustainability perspectives [ 26 , 27 ].

Establishing a close relationship between school meals and small farmers to purchase locally sourced food favors the increase in income and class organization. Consequently, the economic development of the region, as well as contributing to the food and nutritional security of farmers and their families [ 31 , 32 ], goes beyond environmental to social and economic sustainability dimensions. Due to the benefits for both students and farmers widely recognized in the literature, the practice of buying local food is encouraged by public policies for school meals in different parts of the world [ 33 , 34 ].

Therefore, the range of activities involved with school feeding generates unique challenges and opportunities from the point of view of sustainability in the environmental, economic, and social dimensions [ 7 , 8 , 12 , 35 ]. In this sense, school feeding programs are part of the strategies used to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda [ 36 ].

Although school feeding policies in some countries already present recommendations on sustainability in their guiding principles [ 34 , 37 , 38 ], and the literature presents different sustainability practices employed in this context, bringing to light a body of evidence on this topic will be helpful for decision-makers at the government level to create or even revise guidelines for their school feeding policies, incorporating the principles of sustainability. Therefore, the research question that guided this study is “What are the recommendations on sustainability in school feeding policies and the sustainability practices adopted in schools?”. In addition, the findings may help policymakers and members of the school community, within their local context, in the development of sustainability practices linked to school and school feeding. Considering the importance of schools to offer sustainable food and in the formation of conscientious citizens who are able to act on the challenges related to sustainability in the contemporary world [ 6 ], this systematic review aimed to verify the recommendations on sustainability in school feeding policies and the sustainability practices adopted in schools.

2. Materials and Methods

This systematic review was prepared according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA), and its checklist [ 39 ] was registered in PROSPERO [CRD42021264978]. The protocol was performed according to the following steps.

2.1. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria

The inclusion criteria were studies that described the recommendations on sustainability in school feeding policies and the sustainability practices adopted in schools, in environmental, social, and/or economic aspects, with no date and language limits. Legislations of school feeding policies and programs found in the studies reference lists had their full text analyzed to identify sustainability recommendations. The exclusion criteria were: (1) comments, letters, conferences, reviews, abstracts, reports, undergraduate works, discussion papers, and books, (2) studies carried out outside schools or in which the school was not responsible for the action, (3) studies in which practices were not performed or studies where activities were punctual, (4) studies focused on the supplier or that only reported purchases, and (5) studies that did not describe sustainability practices ( Appendix A ).

2.2. Information Source

Detailed individual search strategies were developed for each database: MEDLINE via Pubmed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and Lilacs. A search for gray literature was performed on Google Scholar and for dissertations and theses in ProQuest Global. Additionally, we examined the reference lists of the selected articles as relevant studies could have been missed during the data search. The last search in all databases was carried out on 30 June 2021.

2.3. Search Strategy

The appropriate combinations of truncation and keywords were selected and adapted for the search in each mentioned database ( Table S1—Supplementary Materials ). We used Rayyan software (Qatar Computer Research Institute (QCRI)) to select and exclude duplicate articles, and all references were managed by Mendeley desktop software.

2.4. Study Selection

Two phases were necessary for the selection. In phase 1, researchers I (EBS) and II (DCM) independently reviewed the titles and abstracts of all references identified from databases. EBS and DCM excluded the articles that did not meet the eligibility criteria. In phase 2, the full texts of the selected articles were fully read by the same reviewers (EBS, DCM), and only those that met the inclusion criteria were included. In both phases, the disagreements were discussed until a consensus was reached between the two reviewers. A third reviewer (RBAB) made the final decision in situations without consensus. EBS, an examiner, critically evaluated the list of references of the selected studies. Additional studies were added by the third examiner (RBAB) and the expert (RPZ).

2.5. Data Collection Process

Two reviewers independently (EBS, DCM) collected the following characteristics from the selected studies by authors and year of publication, country of research, the objective of the study, methods, sustainability dimensions, and main results referring to the identified sustainability practices. Calibration exercises were conducted before starting the review to ensure consistency among reviewers. Disagreements were solved by discussion, and the third reviewer (RBAB) adjudicated unresolved disagreements. These data were synthesized by three reviewers (EBS, DCM, and RBAB) using a standardized table containing the following information: reference, authors, year, country, objectives, type of school management (public, private), teaching stage (according to the teaching stages of each country), participants (individuals, schools, or municipalities), sustainability dimensions (environmental, economic, and social), and main results referring to the identified sustainability practices.

2.6. Risk of Individual Bias in the Included Studies

The quality criteria were synthesized using a statistical review assessment instrument (MASTARI) and the Joanna Briggs Institute protocol to assess the risk of bias in the studies. The instrument for assessing the risk of bias included seven questions:

Were the practices identified characterized?

Has the practice been implemented in schools?

Did the practices present a positive implementation response?

Was the study design appropriate?

Was the statistical analysis adequate to the objective of the study?

Did the results answer the main question?

In the case of the schools, was the sample of establishments selected for analysis representative and randomly determined?

The categorization of the risk of bias followed the percentage of “yes” score: “High” for up to 49%, “Moderate” for between 50 and 69%, and “Low” for more than 70%.

The researchers retrieved 1763 studies from the electronic databases; 1319 titles and abstracts were evaluated after removing the duplicates, and, after reading the abstracts, 134 studies were selected for a full reading. Of these, 50 met the eligibility criteria and were included in the systematic review. At the same time, recommendations on sustainability were found in 11 governmental school feeding policies or programs and 5 in other available non-governmental school feeding programs/initiatives retrieved from the studies’ reference lists ( Figure 1 ). The latest available versions were evaluated for governmental and non-governmental school feeding policies or programs.

Figure 1

Flowchart of the systematic review search process. Adapted from PRISMA protocol.

3.1. Studies Characteristics

Regarding sustainability practices, the studies included ( n = 50) were conducted between 1991 and 2021, in the following countries: United States ( n = 22), Brazil ( n = 7), Spain ( n = 3), Italy ( n = 3), South Africa ( n = 2), Canada ( n = 2), England ( n = 2), Denmark ( n = 1), Finland ( n = 1), Ghana ( n = 1), India ( n = 1), Japan ( n = 1), Wales ( n = 1), Kenya ( n = 1), and Tanzania ( n = 1). A parallel study was carried out in the United States and Cuba. The characteristics of the analyzed studies are presented in Table 1 .

Main descriptive characteristics and results from the included studies.

* Independent schools: Non-profit private schools independent in philosophy, administration, and funding.

In the United States, where the largest number of studies was identified ( n = 22), sustainability practices mainly involved educational activities for sustainability [ 20 , 44 , 53 , 56 , 57 , 59 , 60 , 61 , 69 ], waste reduction [ 40 , 41 , 42 , 46 , 49 , 61 , 76 ], school gardens [ 20 , 46 , 55 , 59 , 60 , 61 , 64 ], and participation in programs that promote closer ties between schools and producers [ 46 , 48 , 69 , 70 , 73 , 77 ]. Practices such as food donation [ 49 , 64 , 69 , 76 ], strategies for the rational use of water and energy [ 42 , 61 ], the offer of vegetarian/vegan menus or with reduced meat supply [ 25 , 46 ], and the use of local and organic foods (not mentioning participation in specific programs for this purpose) [ 59 ] were less mentioned. The study was carried out in parallel in the United States and Cuba in the context related to the experiences of urban school gardens in Philadelphia (USA) and Havana (Cuba) [ 51 ].

In Canada, the identified sustainability practices ( n = 2) involved school gardens, purchase of local and organic foods, participation in programs that promote closer ties between schools and local farmers, waste reduction, and the use of vegetarian dishes [ 24 , 71 ]. In Brazil, the only country in Latin America in which studies were identified ( n = 7), the most cited practices were related to school gardens [ 14 , 45 , 74 , 75 , 79 ] and educational activities for sustainability, including training for those involved in the operationalization of the National School Feeding Program (PNAE) [ 14 , 68 , 74 , 79 ]. However, the studies also cited activities to reduce waste [ 14 , 45 , 75 ], use of local [ 14 ] and regional [ 62 ] foods, partnerships for the development of sustainability activities (such as environmental preservation), and to encourage both the use of organic food and to value the work of those involved in all food production [ 68 ].

Among European countries, three studies were conducted in Spain and Italy, two in England, and one in Denmark, Finland, and Wales. The most common practices involved were buying local and organic food [ 8 , 30 , 47 , 58 , 67 ]. In Italy, socio-environmental criteria in hiring school food services were also mentioned [ 47 ]. Among the European studies, practices linked to changes in menus or portions were also identified [ 8 , 26 , 27 , 52 ], sustainability certification [ 26 ], waste reduction and energy and/or water savings [ 26 , 50 ], participation in a program to encourage sustainable eating [ 12 , 54 ], school garden [ 50 ], and practices aimed at social sustainability (such as food donation and the use of food from land confiscated from criminal organizations) [ 8 , 26 , 27 ].

On the African continent, two studies were identified in South Africa [ 43 , 66 ] and one in Ghana [ 63 ], Tanzania [ 78 ], and Kenya [ 65 ]. The identified practices focused on activities related to school gardens [ 43 , 66 , 78 ]. However, the teaching of agroforestry practices, water-saving, and the development and adoption of a meal planning package nutritionally balanced meals, with locally sourced ingredients, were also identified in the studies [ 43 , 63 , 65 ].

Among Asian countries, one study was identified in Japan [ 35 ] and one in India [ 72 ]. In Japan [ 35 ], the study demonstrated that the reinforcement of social norms not to waste and factors related to the planning of menus, pedagogical practices, and recycling and composting activities, contributed to reducing the food waste in schools. In India, the sustainable management of supply chains was studied based on one of the companies responsible for the school feeding program, which considers the integration of economic and non-economic issues in the generation of value in the supply chain [ 72 ].

In 20% of the studies ( n = 10), it was impossible to identify information about the responsibility for managing schools. Most studies were performed in public schools (64%; n = 32). Studies conducted in public and private schools corresponded to 14% ( n = 7), and only one study was conducted in a private school. All stages of the education system, including the earliest (pre-school) and the final years (high school), were mentioned, but the stage referring to primary or elementary education was identified in most studies (68%; n = 34). In 27.4% of the studies ( n = 14), it was impossible to obtain this information. The studies used quantitative (30%; n = 15), qualitative (48%; n = 24), or mixed methods (22%; n = 11).

3.2. Identified Sustainability Practices

The environmental dimension of sustainability was identified in all studies that cited sustainability practices ( n = 50), alone (26%; n = 13), or together with the other considered dimensions. In most studies (44%; n = 22), it was possible to identify practices related to the three sustainability dimensions (environmental, economic, and social). The combination of environmental and social dimensions was identified in 14% of the studies ( n = 7), and the environment with economic dimension in 16% ( n = 8). It is important to highlight that for identifying the sustainability dimensions, some practices, in isolation, represented the attendance of more than one of the mentioned dimensions. In contrast, in other cases, the identification of different sustainability dimensions in the same study resulted from different practices cited by the authors. Sustainability practices adopted in schools are presented in Table 1 . The activities were described according to the dimensions of sustainability ( Figure 2 ).

Figure 2

Identified sustainable practices in schools according to the environmental, economic, and social dimensions.

The involvement with school gardens and education activities for sustainability represented the most commonly reported practices, being identified in 36% ( n = 18) [ 14 , 20 , 24 , 43 , 45 , 46 , 50 , 51 , 55 , 59 , 60 , 61 , 64 , 66 , 74 , 75 , 78 , 79 ] and 28% ( n = 14) [ 14 , 20 , 35 , 44 , 51 , 53 , 56 , 57 , 59 , 60 , 61 , 69 , 74 , 79 ] of the studies, respectively. Among the studies that described the use of school gardens, 8% ( n = 4) [ 14 , 45 , 61 , 75 ] described the cultivation of organic foods and, in the context of education practices for sustainability, travel field studies [ 59 , 60 ] and cooking activities [ 14 , 20 , 44 , 69 ] were also cited.

Another frequently cited category of sustainability practices concerns schools food supply initiatives. Actions to purchase or encourage the employment of local or short-chain foods, including participation in programs such as “Farm to School” and “Fish to School” were cited by 26% ( n = 13) of the studies [ 8 , 14 , 24 , 30 , 46 , 48 , 59 , 67 , 69 , 70 , 71 , 73 , 77 ] and organic foods were observed in 18% ( n = 9) [ 8 , 24 , 30 , 45 , 47 , 58 , 59 , 67 , 68 ]. Participation in a sustainable food consumption promotion program (4%; n = 2) was also identified [ 12 , 54 ]. Although little mentioned, practices that integrated socio-environmental and economic dimensions in the contracts (4%; n = 2), the use of regional (2%; n = 1), seasonal (2%; n = 1), and produced foods in lands confiscated from criminal organizations, were also observed [ 8 , 30 , 47 , 62 , 72 ].

Regarding the adoption of measures to reduce waste, recycling [ 35 , 40 , 41 , 42 , 46 , 49 , 50 ] and composting [ 24 , 26 , 35 , 46 , 49 , 61 , 76 ] were the most reported, described in 14% ( n = 7) of the analyzed studies. These represent important strategies for the control of organic and inorganic waste. Food donation was a practice identified in 10% ( n = 5) of the studies [ 26 , 27 , 49 , 64 , 76 ] and food portion size adjustment in 6% ( n = 3) [ 26 , 27 , 35 ]. Sharing tables [ 76 ], single-course menu [ 8 ], reinforcement of social norms [ 35 ], donation of food waste for animal feeding [ 49 ], team communication to adjust the amount produced, and noise reduction in the cafeteria to allow a more comfortable environment [ 26 ] were also identified practices for the reduction of organic waste, to a lesser degree than the others previously mentioned. Other less cited practices involving the control of non-organic waste generation were the use of reusable devices [ 40 , 45 ], the purchase of products in bulk or with minimum packaging [ 24 , 40 ], the use of returnable bottles [ 14 ], reduced use of paper [ 26 ], or the replacement of mineral water by filtered water [ 8 ].

The adoption of strategies that involved saving water or energy was cited in 10% ( n = 5) of the studies [ 26 , 42 , 43 , 50 , 61 ], represented by activities such as reduced use of energy, energy audits, reduced use of water, and installing a cistern for collection rainwater or irrigation system for water reuse.

As for menu actions, practical studies were identified as offering vegetarian/vegan meals [ 24 , 46 , 52 ], reducing meat supply [ 25 ], planning a menu that included the exposure of students to unfamiliar or unappreciated foods [ 35 ], and the adoption of a meal planning package that facilitated the planning of nutritionally balanced meals with locally sourced ingredients [ 63 ].

Although mentioned in only one study, partnerships for the development of sustainability activities (such as environmental preservation) and certification were also identified [ 26 , 68 ].

3.3. Sustainability Recommendations in School Feeding Policies/Programs

Among the 11 policies under government responsibility identified in the studies that mentioned sustainability recommendations, 73% ( n = 8) were national in scope, 18% ( n = 2) state, and 9% ( n = 1) municipal. The European continent had the highest number of policies/programs (64%; n = 7), identified in Italy, England, Finland, Spain, Sweden, and Germany [ 37 , 80 , 81 , 82 , 83 , 84 , 85 ]. School feeding policies/programs were also identified in Brazil, Japan, and the United States [ 34 , 86 , 87 , 88 , 89 ] ( Table 2 ).

Identified Sustainability recommendations in governmental school food policies documents.

The most mentioned aspects were the origin and type of food used in school meals, such as organic, local or shorter transport distances, seasonal, agroecological, and sustainable [ 34 , 37 , 80 , 81 , 82 , 83 , 84 , 85 , 86 , 87 ]. Other examples cited in this category, although less frequently, were reducing meat, increasing consumption of vegetables, reducing carbon emissions, typical foods, and respecting local traditions [ 34 , 37 , 82 , 84 , 86 ].

Nutrition education practices and sustainable consumption and recommendations for reducing food waste and non-organic residues were also identified [ 34 , 37 , 80 , 81 , 84 , 86 , 88 , 89 ]. School gardens, fair trade, valuing workers involved in food production, energy reduction, and animal welfare, although observed, were less frequent [ 34 , 37 , 80 , 84 , 86 , 88 ].

Regarding other non-governmental programs and initiatives ( n = 5), two were identified in the United States [ 90 , 91 ], two were global in scope [ 92 , 93 ], and one was identified in England [ 94 ]. The set of activities observed in these programs involved encouraging the purchase of local, seasonal, and sustainable food [ 91 , 92 , 94 ], school gardens [ 91 , 94 ], visits to local farmers [ 91 , 94 ], cooking and nutritional education activities [ 91 , 94 ], waste reduction [ 90 ], and specific actions for each school to train people to generate environmental and sustainability awareness [ 93 ] ( Table 3 ).

Other available non-governmental school feeding programs/initiatives retrieved from the studies.

3.4. Risk of Bias

Among the studies analyzed, 49 had a low risk of bias and 1 had a moderate risk. All studies implemented the practices and answered the main research question ( Table S2—Supplementary Materials ).

4. Discussion

In 2019, the EAT-The Lancet Commission established universal strategies and recommendations to achieve food system transformation, striving for human health and environmental sustainability. The need to improve availability and access to healthy foods from sustainable food systems and educate individuals on these topics using food programs was reinforced [ 95 ]. Therefore, the school is an opportune locus for sustainability practices. The environmental, economic, and social effects of the actions carried out in school food services and the education process will echo both in society’s present and future.

Vegetable gardens and education activities for sustainability were the most cited practices among the studies. School gardens are essential tools to support community and school feeding programs by using their produce in student meals and training vegetable growing skills [ 19 , 43 , 66 ]. However, the support of the school administration, the availability of space and resources to purchase tools and supplies, teacher training, the integration of the garden into the school curriculum, sharing activities with community members, and the presence of a coordinator to organize activities are identified as key factors in determining the results of the implementation and continuity of school gardens [ 66 , 96 , 97 ].

Education plays a central role in enabling students to think and act critically on current and future global challenges, including climate change, environmental degradation, biodiversity loss, poverty, and inequality [ 16 ]. Therefore, the literature has strongly recommended and evidenced the association between school gardens and educational processes aimed at health, environment, and sustainability [ 19 , 24 , 61 ]. Gonsalves et al. [ 19 ] emphasize the role of school gardens “in environmental and nature education, in local food biodiversity and conservation, food, eco-literacy, diets, nutrition and health, and agricultural education, contributing to the search for a food system more sustainable.”

The importance of education in enabling individuals to promote sustainable development is reaffirmed in Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4). SDG 4 is integrated with other indivisible goals, comprising the environmental, economic, and social dimensions of Agenda 2030, an action plan for people, the planet, and prosperity [ 98 ].

In line with this purpose, schools can observe efforts to integrate environmental education, ecological literacy, or education for sustainability in their curricula [ 14 , 56 , 57 , 60 , 69 ]. However, a recent study [ 99 ] that assessed the extent to which environmental issues are integrated into primary and secondary education policies and curricula in 46 member states of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) demonstrated that despite 92% of the documents making some reference to environmental issues, the depth of this inclusion was low. Terms such as “climate change” and “biodiversity” were rarely mentioned. What has been done is not enough to ensure that learning helps in confronting current global challenges. The document recommends, among other actions, that greater emphasis needs to be placed on environmental issues in education, integrating them into curricula and overcoming the focus on cognitive knowledge, and training all teachers and school leaders in education for sustainable development [ 99 ]. Also, considering the food system’s environmental, economic, and social impacts, the efforts to integrate themes involving sustainable food consumption into educational practices are worthy of note [ 12 , 44 ]. These approaches are fundamental because education can increase adherence to different sustainability practices since, although observed in this study, many had a low frequency of realization.

The use of local or organic foods, often set by government regulations, stems from concerns about students’ health, the living conditions of farmers, and the environment [ 34 , 47 , 48 , 70 , 100 ]. Initiatives involving the use of local and organic foods were also frequently cited among the analyzed studies [ 8 , 14 , 24 , 30 , 47 , 58 , 59 , 67 ].

The creative food purchase policy incorporates social and environmental criteria into the contracts, going beyond economic considerations and encouraging the purchase of local food [ 33 ]. Examples of buying local and organic food are worldwide, as in the Brazilian case at the National School Feeding Program, where the purchase of food from local farmers is a compulsory item provided in its legal framework. Organic food is preferred in public purchases, the standardized instruments for this type of purchase in the country’s program [ 34 ]. Through Home Grown School Feeding, the World Food Program (WFP) works with governments in 46 countries to develop national policies that provide adequate food for students and ensure local development by purchasing food from family farmers [ 92 ]. There are also experiences linked to the Farm To School programs, which purchase local food and develop educational activities related to agriculture, food, health, and nutrition [ 70 , 71 ]. All initiatives that connect schools to family farmers are vital because the benefits of school meals go beyond the boundaries of schools and reach family farmers. These involve economic (increase in income, price support, and inclusion in the market), social (food security, living conditions, and social inclusion), and environmental (crop diversification and greater production of organic food) aspects [ 31 ].

Reducing food waste and controlling non-organic waste represent initiatives that must be implemented in school food services. Studies in different parts of the world have demonstrated that these places are major food waste generators, causing environmental, economic, and social impacts [ 101 , 102 , 103 , 104 ]. Concerning non-organic waste, a study carried out in northern Colorado, USA identified that factors such as the speed of the service line, the quality of food, the cost, and the difficulty managers have in understanding the impact of their decisions at a systemic level, affected the ability to reduce or recover these wastes [ 105 ].

In our systematic review, composting was the most cited practice for reducing the generation of organic waste and recycling non-organic waste. However, it is important to highlight that even among the studies in which the performance of waste management practices was cited, they were often not reported among the participants or were reported by a minority of them [ 26 , 40 , 41 , 42 , 46 , 49 , 76 ], demonstrating that adopting waste reduction strategies in school meals is not yet routine practice.

Among the strategies to promote the reduction of food waste, the literature discusses the importance of integrating this theme and the sustainability of the food system in pedagogical practices, in addition to actions aimed at improving operations and planning, team communication, and the involvement of students in waste management activities [ 35 , 102 ]. Food donation can represent a successful experience to mitigate the impacts of the production of meals by reducing waste and serving people in vulnerable situations, with relatively few investments [ 27 ]. However, the main barriers related to food donation and food recovery in this context involve concerns about responsibility, cost, inconsistent food waste, policy confusion, and the sanitary quality of food [ 76 ]. As for non-organic waste, among other recommendations, a study indicated that school food services could incorporate packaging waste in purchasing processes, as they do not always control the packaging used by manufacturers [ 105 ].

The adoption of some strategies related to saving water and energy was mentioned among the analyzed studies. In school feeding, studies that reported the environmental impacts of the choices made by food services regarding the origin and types of food purchased (fresh or not, and from different groups, such as meat and vegetables) demonstrated a significant contribution from phases before the production of meals [ 21 , 23 , 106 ]. However, considering that during the production of meals both water and energy are essential factors for the operation of the service, the training of a school’s employees and the monitoring of the intended use of these resources is necessary. Instruments created to evaluate sustainability practices in food services, which include among their analysis categories the rational use of energy and water, are helpful tools in this regard [ 107 , 108 ].

Environmental and health damage to the population generated by how the food system has been operated is already well established [ 109 ]. Two of the factors contributing to the harmful effects of this modus operandi are meat production, especially red meat, and food waste, which are responsible, among other factors, for a significant emission of greenhouse gases into the environment and/or consumption of freshwater [ 23 , 106 , 110 , 111 ]. Therefore, some practices related to the offer of vegetarian/vegan menus, with a reduction in the meat offering, the adequacy of the portion sizes, or the adoption of the single-course scholar menu have been reported in the literature [ 8 , 25 , 26 , 27 , 35 , 112 ]. Some instruments have been proposed to allow the planning of more environmentally sustainable menus based on reducing carbon and/or water footprints while addressing nutritional, economic, and cultural dimensions [ 7 , 113 , 114 , 115 , 116 ]. In addition, the definition of criteria for planning sustainable menus in the context of school meals has also been described [ 117 ].

Other less mentioned strategies involved using regional foods, environmental certification, and the development of partnerships to carry out environmental preservation activities.

According to Morgan [ 118 ], “the creation of a sustainable school foodservice is the litmus test of a country’s commitment to sustainable development, as it involves nothing less than the health and well-being of young people and vulnerable people”. In this sense, several efforts were made to strengthen the role of school feeding in achieving nutritionally adequate diets for students and meet the principles of sustainability in the three dimensions: environmental, economic, and social. However, it is noteworthy that, despite the general premise established in the literature of the potential effects of sustainability practices in school in mitigating global challenges, the wide scope of school feeding and the variability of characteristics and challenges experienced between different regions of the globe, including different regulations, economic, social, political and cultural conditions, demand specific solutions, adapted to each local context.

5. Limitations

This review has some limitations. First, it was not possible to state that the school feeding policies/programs that mentioned concerns about sustainability were exhausted, since the policies were found in the studies reference lists that had their full text analyzed. In addition, some of these policies, written in a non-English language, were translated through a translation platform. Therefore, some information may have been lost due to language barriers. Despite these limitations, these findings evidenced different recommendations that reinforced the importance of actions, which ranged from the choice of sustainable foods to the strengths of nutrition and sustainable consumption practices education.

6. Conclusions

There is an imminent need to ensure the prosperity of nations, anchored in the priorities of protecting the health of people and the planet and guaranteeing adequate living conditions, reducing social inequalities. It involves offering food in terms of education, enabling students to make conscious choices consistent with this need. In this sense, schools and school feeding programs have all the necessary characteristics for developing practices that aim at sustainability in the environmental, economic, and social dimensions, given their scope and the different perspectives that can be worked.

The present study identified sustainability recommendations in 16 governmental and non-governmental policies/programs. Recommendations for purchasing sustainable food (organic, local, and seasonal), nutrition education focused on sustainability, and reducing food waste were frequent.

Several sustainability practices were described in this systematic review, such as the use of school gardens and education activities for sustainability. Actions carried out in food services were also mentioned, from the planning of menus and the purchase of raw materials (mainly local and organic foods, vegetarian/vegan menus) to the distribution of meals (especially practices to reduce waste organics and inorganics such as composting, recycling, donating food, and adjusting portion sizes).

The findings reinforce the need to stimulate managers’ views, in their most varied spheres of power, for the priority that should be given to this theme, so that education for sustainability is universally part of the curricula, and so that food services can equip themselves with the knowledge and tools necessary to carry out sustainability practices in their daily activities.

Lastly, further investigations to evaluate these practices are needed to examine the evolution of their adoption and the main barriers and potentialities related to their implementation. With a specific look at the school field, assessment instruments can help with this monitoring.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the “National Council for Scientific and Technological Development–CNPq”.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/foods11020176/s1 , Table S1: Databases and terms used to search references on sustainability practices adopted in schools; Table S2: Quality criteria of the studies selected for the systematic review.

Full-text articles excluded, with reasons.

Legend—Exclusion criteria: (1) Comments, letters, conferences, reviews, abstracts, reports, undergraduate works, discussion papers, and books, (2) studies carried out outside schools or in which the school was not responsible for the action, (3) studies in which practices were not performed or studies where activities were punctual, (4) studies focused on the supplier or that only reported purchases, and (5) studies that did not describe sustainability practices.

Author Contributions

E.B.d.S., conceptualization, investigation, methodology, writing—original draft, writing—review and editing; D.d.C.M., investigation and methodology; R.P.Z., data curation, formal analysis, supervision, validation and writing—review and editing; A.R., writing—review and editing, visualization, project administration. R.B.A.B., data curation, formal analysis, supervision, validation and writing—review and editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Data availability statement.

No data availability.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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