Food Crisis Response entrenches Corporate Influence

Powerful governments and corporations are exploiting food price hikes to entrench unfair global trade rules that perpetuate hunger.

A new FIAN International briefing, Food Crisis Response Entrenches Corporate Influence, calls for a transformation of the global economic system and its trade, finance, and investment regimes.

It highlights the lack of global action to address the roots of systemic and recurring global food crises, largely due to powerful vested interests which have dominated the global response to date.

Right to Food and Nutrition in Europe

The Right to Food and Nutrition (RtFN) is often overlooked within Europe and is often considered to pertain exclusively to the “Global South” or “developing countries”. Thus, Europe limits its engagement to development support and political discourse on the importance of realizing and protecting the RtFN in other countries, while failing to adopt national and regional RtFN measures.

To better explore and understand how RtFN issues manifest in Europe, including national contexts, FIAN International, FIAN Austria, FIAN Belgium, FIAN Portugal, Coventry University (Center for Agroecology, Water, and Resilience), and URGENCI have developed the project: Responding to Hunger: A Toolkit for Learning and Action, with funding from the Erasmus+ Program. This initiative was motivated by the lack of processes or consistent efforts to understand the right to food and nutrition in European countries, as well as the absence of a targeted human rights-based assessment of national food programs and policies in various European countries. Indeed, some measures and programs do address food insecurity and there are some health-related statistics, but this approach has significant limits. With food insecurity, hunger, and poverty on the rise across Europe, now is the time to innovate how the structural issues are identified and assessed, to better support policy solutions and implementation measures at all levels.

The project has produced a series of modules that explore key issues and findings to inform and expand our understanding of the right to food and nutrition in Europe, and to support developing more broad based analysis that include issues related to social inclusion. The modules examine national legal frameworks in Portugal, discriminatory migration policies in the UK, social programs in Austria, nutrition and health in Belgium, and local food policies in Germany. A summary of the findings and conclusions (ENFRPTDE) is available to provide a short overview of the main outcomes of our work.

 

Legal and Institutional Frameworks for the Right to Food and Nutrition

In this module, you will find a discussion of the legal and institutional framework of the RtFN in Europe. This includes a conceptual overview, examples of approaches and processes utilized in different countries, as well as significant obstacles and challenges towards realizing the RtFN. The final section discusses civil society initiatives monitoring the RtFN as opportunities for advocacy and provides a step-by-step guide for a human rights-based approach to collective mobilization, monitoring, and public debate.

View in English and Portuguese

 

Access to Food: Mapping and Assessing existing Measures in Austria

Using the Austrian context as example, this module includes an assessment of state actions that support the implementation of the right to food, as well as an overview of private food aid responses. These responses are mapped and assessed throughout the module. Testimonies from persons experiencing poverty and persons working in food security or related areas are also included and an overview on some of the main challenges in existing measures is provided. Two of the measures addressed are evaluated in detail based on human rights principles. Additional guiding questions can be found in the annex and serve to reveal the connection between the RtFN and other social rights and identify additional actors that should be involved in decision-making processes, which are also outlined in this module.

View in English and German

 

Social Inclusion and the Right to Food and Nutrition in Europe

An examination on the relationship between socially constructed differences and right to food violations. This analysis is critical because there is a generalized lack of intentional literature or guidance on how the right to food and nutrition can monitor violations from a socially inclusive perspective. Therefore, this module suggests ways to create an inclusive right-to-food monitoring practice in the UK, with a specific focus on asylum seekers.

Available in English.

 

What does nutrition mean from the right to food perspective? And how is nutrition monitored in Belgium?

This module contains an analysis of nutrition issues, from a human rights-based perspective and from a food systems perspective. This analysis is based on a case study of Belgium. The methodology reviews the international obligations of states regarding the right to food and nutrition and their translation into national and regional food public policies. It is nourished with inputs and testimonies from practitioners and experts on issues of poverty, healthy, sustainability, and climate, as well as consultations with local Belgian-based organizations and social movements.

Available in English and French.

 

Participation and Local Food Systems Governance: Advancing the Right to Food and Nutrition in Europe

People face different barriers to participation, as well as different decision-making contexts at the local level. This module explores these questions and provides some guidance on how to gain a deeper understanding of where and how food-related decisions are made, how conditions can be created for people to participate in decision-making, and how to assess decision-making spaces and risks and opportunities related to multi-stakeholderism, in the realm of territorial/local food policy decision-making, and especially in food policy councils. The emerging Heidelberg (Germany) Food Policy Council is referenced as an example.

View as English and German.

Human Rights Hold the Key to Protecting Biodiversity

Yet it is precisely these groups who know how to preserve our precious natural systems write Sofia Monsalve  and Georgina Catacora-Vargas in Project Syndicate.

HEIDELBERG/LA PAZ – In October 2021, two tractors with a large chain stretched between them cleared more than 2,000 hectares of forest in the Brazilian Cerrado, one of the world’s most biodiverse areas. Tragically, such scenes have become all too familiar in the region.

In 2021 alone, 8,531 square kilometers (3,294 square miles) of the Cerrado’s forests, grasslands, and other native vegetation were destroyed – the highest rate since 2015. And in recent decades, 40-55% of the Cerrado biome has been converted to croplands, pastures, and tree plantations, with much of the deforestation making way for large industrial soy monocultures and cattle production. Agribusinesses have dispossessed thousands of communities in land grabs and destroyed the surrounding environment.

The Cerrado is a tragic and alarming example of how quickly the world’s biological diversity is being lost. The region is estimated to be home to 12,000 plant species – 35% of which grow nowhere else in the world – as well as around 25 million people, including indigenous peoples, smallholder farmers, and other communities where traditional livelihoods depend on biodiversity. All are in urgent need of protection.

For the past few years, governments have been negotiating a new Global Biodiversity Framework under the auspices of the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity. But very little progress was made at the most recent round of talks in June, and though there is a global consensus on the urgent need to act, the current debate is based on two dangerously mistaken premises.

The first is the assumption that human societies and ecosystems exist separately from one another, implying that the best way to conserve biodiversity is to carve out protected areas that exclude all human activity. Hence, most of the focus today is on the “30×30” campaign to establish formal protections for 30% of all land and marine areas by 2030.

But this “fortress conservation” approach has already been tried, and it was shown to lead to systematic violations of local communities’ rights. By deploying such strategies, governments risk sidelining precisely the people who live closest to the ecosystems that we are trying to protect, and who play a critical role in sustainably managing those resources to preserve their own livelihoods.

The second flawed premise guiding today’s negotiations is that protecting biodiversity must be turned into a business. Instead of ensuring that industrial and financial activities are regulated to avoid harming people and the planet, the current proposals focus on trying to transform the biodiversity crisis into another opportunity to boost corporate profits.

In “green” business and financial circles, the current buzz is about “nature-based solutions,” a term used to describe interventions ranging from reforestation to carbon markets. The concept has a nice ring to it, and it has been endorsed by the UN Environment Assembly. But it is dangerously ill-defined.

Those who use the term seldom refer to human rights and tend to focus instead on offsetting schemes, such as carbon markets, which tie the protection of biodiversity in one place to its ongoing destruction elsewhere. Rather than a remedy, “nature-based solutions” are becoming part of the problem, serving as a license for business as usual, or even encouraging more land grabs in areas traditionally managed by indigenous peoples and local communities.

Governments need to look beyond “30×30” and “nature-based solutions” to put human rights at the center of the Global Biodiversity Framework. Doing so acknowledges that human societies and natural ecosystems are inextricably connected, and that biodiversity protection requires a shift to more sustainable social and economic models. The goal should be to achieve human and ecosystems’ well-being, not shareholder value.

A human-rights lens sharpens the focus on those people and communities who are most affected by today’s destructive practices. It shows that we need to address the drivers of biodiversity loss – extractive and industrial activities – rather than entrusting protection of the world’s ecosystems to corporations and financial markets. Governments are required to hold these entities accountable for the damage they cause to the environment and human communities, and to protect the rights of indigenous peoples, smallholder farmers, and others who have long helped protect the world’s precious ecosystems.

Our food systems are a prime example of why we need a different approach. The crops and animal breeds that feed humanity co-evolved with human farming communities over the course of millennia. But with the expansion of industrial farming models since the twentieth century, we have radically broken from this tradition, destroying 75% of biological diversity in our food and agriculture. Most food systems today are based on deforestation, land degradation, use of pesticides, pollution, high energy consumption, genetic homogeneity, and socioeconomic inequity.

We cannot solve the biodiversity crisis without transforming these dysfunctional food systems. In their place, we can embrace agroecology, which has been shown to be a powerful and effective approach to food production, distribution, and consumption. Agroecology fosters biodiversity by stimulating synergies within ecosystems to boost resilience and productivity. Instead of degrading the land, agroecology revitalizes soils and contributes to their restoration and conservation.

This approach – oriented toward generating integral well-being – has always been taken by indigenous peoples, peasants, and other smallholder food producers. Traditional, collective knowledge of sustainable farming (much of it held by women), together with locally adapted and self-reliant innovations, is central to these groups’ management systems. Protecting this knowledge and supporting agroecology is essential to the shift toward a more sustainable, healthy, and just manner of producing, distributing, and consuming food.

A good example is Cuba, where peasants and urban farmers have boosted food production and resilience while dramatically reducing the use of agrochemicals. One key factor in their success has been the strengthening of peasant networks to facilitate knowledge sharing.

This year’s biodiversity negotiations are a crucial opportunity for world leaders to agree on a plan to protect both nature and people. But a new framework will succeed only to the extent that it guarantees the rights of indigenous peoples, peasants, and other smallholder food producers, while putting the worlds’ food systems on a path toward agroecology.

Sofia Monsalve is Secretary-General of FIAN International.

Georgina Catacora-Vargas is President of the Latin American Scientific Society of Agroecology.

The Problem with the Industrial Food System – and How to Fix It

The UN Special Rapporteurs on the Right to Food, on the Enjoyment of a Safe, Clean, Healthy and Sustainable Environment, and on Toxics have described the main problems with the industrial food system, in particular with respect to environmental destruction and related human rights violations.

They have also outlined what governments should do to move towards sustainable, healthy and just agroecological practices supporting the right to food and nutrition and human rights more broadly.

FIAN International and national sections in Indonesia, Zambia, Brazil, Colombia and Ecuador summarized their analysis and recommendations with a view to using those recommendations to support the advocacy work of communities seeking the transformation of food systems.

Q and A by FIAN International The Problem with the Industrial Food System & How to Fix It

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Putting the Voluntary Guidelines on Tenure and the Voluntary Guidelines on Small-Scale Fisheries into practice

This learning guide has been designed specifically to give civil society and grassroots organizations a deeper understanding of the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (VGGT) and the Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and Poverty Eradication (SSF Guidelines). The aim is to enable the members of these organizations and their constituents, especially small-scale fishers and fishworkers, to use the VGGT and SSF Guidelines meaningfully and effectively to improve the governance of tenure in their respective countries.

Published by FAO and FIAN International, 2022

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REPORT – Corporate Capture of FAO: Industry’s Deepening Influence on Global Food Governance

A silent revolution is underway at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Corporations are being given increasing influence at the expense of states, small scale food producers, Indigenous Peoples and civil society.

This process threatens the democratic governance of our food systems. In a new report, Corporate Capture of FAO: Industry's Deepening Influence on Global Food Governance , FIAN International and Corporate Accountability outline the extent of corporate engagement in the FAO and its negative impacts on global decision-making at a time of worsening food crisis.

This report presents case studies of FAO partnerships illustrating how these corporate sector engagements are incompatible with the FAO´s mandate and work priorities. These cases are indicative of a growing trend towards corporate capture of UN agencies through multistakeholderism, which prioritizes corporate-friendly solutions to food systems transformation. 

Download the report: Corporate Capture of FAO: Industry's Deepening Influence on Global Food Governance 

Business Due Diligence and Related States’ Obligations in the Context of Corporate Accountability

FIAN International’s increasing involvement in standard-setting processes and policy discussions on the issue of ‘business & human rights’ or corporate accountability stems from the organization’s work on cases of violations and abuses of the right to food and nutrition involving corporate actors.

Concerned by excessive emphasis on voluntary standards, corporate capture and proliferation of multistakeholder spaces allowing businesses as stakeholders in human rights discussions, FIAN International and its sections published a position paper on Business due diligence and related States’ obligations in the context of corporate accountability.

The paper identifies shortcomings in the concept of business due diligence and lays down a framework of corporate accountability in accordance with States’ obligation to respect, protect and fulfil human rights both within and beyond their borders. The paper is a living document.

View and download Business due diligence and related States’ obligations in the context of corporate accountability.

Charter Cities and Land Rights

The adoption of the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (VGGT) in 2012, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) adopted in 2007, and the 2018 UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas (UNDROP) are all significant landmarks in the international recognition of this essentuial right.

Nonetheless, land grabbing, and commodification and accumulation of land through dispossession are an integral and growing part of the global structures that further entrench inequality and hunger worldwide.

The rise of various types of Special Economic Zones (SEZ) have been part of this trend since the 1970s. SEZs are generally accompanied by the promise of human development and poverty reduction. In practice they often become epicenters of land conflicts, linked to increasing land speculation, displacement of communities, and the violation of forest rights.

This FIAN report, What is the right to land in the age of private jurisdictions? provides an overview of the human right to land within the context of the growth of SEZs that strive to establish autonomy from host states or even create private jurisdictions free of any state regulation.

It shows how some of the main promoters of private jurisdictions approach this – taking a closer look at Honduran Development and Employment Zones – and highlights the main contradictions of these models within contemporary understandings of the international human right to land.

REPORT – War in Ukraine: Recurring Food Crises Expose Systemic Fragility

Media headlines can give the impression that the Russia-Ukraine conflict is solely responsible for rising food prices and shortages. It is certainly aggravating a precarious food security situation, not least in countries such as Yemen and Lebanon, which relied heavily on wheat imports from Ukraine and Russia and were already facing tremendous challenges before Russia’s invasion.

However, food prices were skyrocketing before the war began. And the numbers of hungry and malnourished people have been rising sharply around the world, largely due to other wars and conflicts and their interplay with structural factors shaping food systems.

This FIAN International report shows that the international response to the growing crisis has been flawed and calls on governments and the UN to address structural drivers fueling hunger and malnutrition, as well as war, armed conflicts and widespread violence, in order to stop recurrent global food crises.  

Download the report War in Ukraine: Recurring Food Crises Expose Systemic Fragility

Las Cadenas de los Agrotoxicos – the Chain of Pesticides

The objective of this document of FIAN Ecuador is to provide arguments from the right to food and Peasant Rights perspective to allow for the construction of public policies aimed at a transition to an Ecuador free of pesticides.

This publication is the first of the “Peasant Rights” Series, which aims to make political readings in the rural area in the light of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and other people working in rural areas.

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