Difference between revisions of "Food sovereignty"

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The international peasant group [https://viacampesina.org/en/the-1996-rome-food-sovereignty-declaration-in-postcards/ La Via Campesina] issued the Food Sovereignty Declaration during the 1996 UN Food Summit held in Rome. This historical document was introduced to counter ''“the concept of Food Security” – inadequate to address the worsening global hunger and poverty – and the Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the main cause of such problems''. Thus, the Food Sovereignty movement is Internationalist in character, and provides a framework for understanding and transforming international governance around food and agriculture.
 
It establishes '''Food as a basic human right''' and ''Food Sovereignty'' as :
 
* ''a Future without hunger
* the need of agrarian reform which gives landless and farming people — especially women — ownership and control of the land they work and returns territories to Indigenous peoples.
* Protecting natural resources
* Reorganizing the food trade. National agricultural policies must priorize production for domestic consumption and food self-sufficiency.
* Ending the Globalization of Hunger, induced by the role of multilateral institutions and speculative capital.
* Social peace, as a pre-requisite
* Based on democratic control by peasants and small farmers and other actors: participation, deliberation and decision-making''
 
Food Sovereignty is a political project and at once an empowering  process that adapts to the people and places where it is put in practice. It must be tackled at different scales but based on solidarity and building a fairer world from the bottom up.
 
== Public policies associated with this theme ==
Public policies play a determinant role in shaping the future of agricultural and food systems. For example:
 
* [https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-5985_en.html Public policies for food sovereignty], Sylvia Kay, Emily Mattheisen, Nora McKeon, Paola De Meo, Ana Moragues Faus, 2018
* [https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-6581_fr.html A LETTER TO BUILD FOOD SOVEREIGNTY FROM OUR MUNICIPALITIES], Reas, red de redes, 2014
 
== Main networks working on this issue ==
* [https://viacampesina.org/en/ La VIA Campesina] network, International Peasant's Movement.
* The [https://urgenci.net/about-us/ URGENCI network] brings together Local Solidarity Partnerships between Producers and Consumers (LSPC) actors worldwide, all kinds of Community Supported Agriculture initiatives, as a solution to the problems associated with global intensive agricultural production and distribution. Urgenci is a member of [http://www.ripess.org/ RIPESS Intercontinental] and [https://urgenci.net/about-us/ RIPESS Europe].
 
== Links ==
=== With socioeco.org ===
 
[[THEMA ID::64|Matching Socioeco.org thematic keyword]]
 
=== With Ripess NL articles or position papers ===
 
* [https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-8549_en.html Food sovereignty – so needed, so far away], Ruta Śpiewak, July 2022
* [https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-8134_en.html For a food system based on agroecology and food sovereignty], REAS, Red de Redes, February 2022
* [https://www.socioeco.org/bdf_fiche-document-7932_en.html New network and journal issue on food sovereignty in Hungary], November 2021
{{PedagogicalTools|id=64}}
 


[[Category:Alternative local food networks|F]]
[[Category:Alternative local food networks|F]]

Latest revision as of 14:22, 23 August 2022

Template:Ebauche

The international peasant group La Via Campesina issued the Food Sovereignty Declaration during the 1996 UN Food Summit held in Rome. This historical document was introduced to counter “the concept of Food Security” – inadequate to address the worsening global hunger and poverty – and the Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the main cause of such problems. Thus, the Food Sovereignty movement is Internationalist in character, and provides a framework for understanding and transforming international governance around food and agriculture.

It establishes Food as a basic human right and Food Sovereignty as :

  • a Future without hunger
  • the need of agrarian reform which gives landless and farming people — especially women — ownership and control of the land they work and returns territories to Indigenous peoples.
  • Protecting natural resources
  • Reorganizing the food trade. National agricultural policies must priorize production for domestic consumption and food self-sufficiency.
  • Ending the Globalization of Hunger, induced by the role of multilateral institutions and speculative capital.
  • Social peace, as a pre-requisite
  • Based on democratic control by peasants and small farmers and other actors: participation, deliberation and decision-making

Food Sovereignty is a political project and at once an empowering process that adapts to the people and places where it is put in practice. It must be tackled at different scales but based on solidarity and building a fairer world from the bottom up.

Public policies associated with this theme

Public policies play a determinant role in shaping the future of agricultural and food systems. For example:

Main networks working on this issue

  • La VIA Campesina network, International Peasant's Movement.
  • The URGENCI network brings together Local Solidarity Partnerships between Producers and Consumers (LSPC) actors worldwide, all kinds of Community Supported Agriculture initiatives, as a solution to the problems associated with global intensive agricultural production and distribution. Urgenci is a member of RIPESS Intercontinental and RIPESS Europe.

Links

With socioeco.org

Matching Socioeco.org thematic keyword

With Ripess NL articles or position papers

With pedagogical tools in socioeco.org