India Rodgers

“Food sovereignty is the right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems.”

The US Food Sovereignty Alliance (USFSA), of which WhyHunger is a founding member, is proud to announce that it is accepting nominations for the 2013 Food Sovereignty Prize. Since 2009, the Food Sovereignty Prize has been awarded to an organization advancing the cause of food sovereignty through education and direct collective action. Prize winners must also have implemented programs and policies that prioritize the leadership of women, indigenous peoples, people of color, migrant workers and other food providers in the global food movement.

Last October, WhyHunger co-hosted the fourth annual Food Sovereignty Prize ceremony in New York City, honoring grassroots organizations from Korea, Sri Lanka, Honduras, and the US. The event, which also featured UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier De Schutter and music from musician and activist Tom Morello: The Nightwatchman, brought the issue of food sovereignty to a larger audience through widespread media coverage.

The 2013 Food Sovereignty Prize will be awarded by the US Food Sovereignty Alliance, a US-based collaboration of food justice, anti-hunger, labor, environmental, faith-based, and family farming and fishing organizations. The USFSA works to connect local and national struggles for food justice with the international movement for food sovereignty to uphold the right to food as a public good and basic human necessity.

The deadline for nominations is May 20.

Read the Call for Nominations and submit a nomination: www.foodsovereigntyprize.org. French and Spanish versions available.

Past recipients of the Food Sovereignty Prize: www.foodsovereigntyprize.org/the-honorees/

Learn more about food sovereignty: www.foodsovereigntyprize.org/about-fs/

Questions: Email foodsovprize@gmail.com

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by Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, Outreach and Partnerships Manager

I am writing from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the 20th UN Commission on Sustainable Development Summit. Called Rio+20, this is the largest global summit on sustainability and development. Nearly every country is participating, with delegations numbering in the hundreds and even thousands—all debating the future of human society. Because the world is now so connected, the big questions about our economies, our societies, our environments, our problems and our solutions have to be discussed as a global community. The principle question every government is trying to answer is how all people can continue to grow, develop and improve in ways that end poverty and promote fairness without destroying the environment.

When I arrived, I had only a general understanding of the issues to be debated. I wanted to hear from others and to share WhyHunger’s position: that strong local and regional food systems based on ecological principles can end hunger, create jobs and protect nature. But I soon learned that the discussions were much more complex.
[read entire article…]

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Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, WhyHunger’s Outreach and Partnerships Manager, is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the UN Rio +20 sustainable development conference and the concurrent Peoples’ Summit. The negotiations of Rio +20 will help shape the future of our global environment and the lives of millions of people in poverty – though many of those who will be most impacted are not even at the table. Tristan will be bringing the perspectives of WhyHunger’s grassroots partners to discussions in Rio and reporting back on what he sees there in the coming days. A version of his first piece, examining the disconnect between words and action on sustainable development, originally appeared on “Climate Connections.”

At the UN conference on climate change in Durban, South Africa last December, representatives of developed nations presented a plan to combat climate change through sustainable agricultural techniques in Africa. This plan, dubbed “climate smart agriculture,” would purportedly reduce and sequester carbon emissions while conserving soils and feeding a continent. It seemed that developed countries had at last listened to the growing concern and criticism of industrial agriculture’s disastrous ecological effects.

International social movements like La Via Campesina have argued compellingly for years that “small farmers cool the planet,” relying on many studies that ecological agriculture can reduce climate change. Ecological agriculture or “agroecology” uses no chemicals like fertilizers or pesticides derived from fossil fuels, and biodiverse agriculture systems greatly reduce carbon in the atmosphere, while maintaining local resilience in the face of climate change. Researchers estimate that the global food system emits 30% of all greenhouse gases, meaning that a global transition to agroecology would have a significant impact. (Watch our short film, “The Food and Climate Connection,” for a compelling look at this issue.)

Unfortunately, while world leaders may have listened, they seem to have completely misunderstood.

What they heard was that food plants absorb carbon. Thus world leaders understood the promise of agroecology solely as a carbon offset: corporations would, in effect, adopt farms using “climate smart” techniques and treat them as carbon offsets. That is, in exchange for investments in small-scale African farms, the corporations could continue polluting as usual.  And what of the farmers? Many of them would become dependent on the corporations’ funding, losing autonomy and control over their land. “Climate smart agriculture” would end up simply as a tool for corporations to keep polluting while also expanding their reach and production into Africa. Many critics in Durban charged that “climate smart agriculture” was the first step to a land grab, or, with an eye to where carbon is stored, a “soil grab.”

And because the developed nations’ representatives focused only on how plants could sequester carbon, they missed the fundamental strength of agroecology: it doesn’t rely on expensive and polluting petrochemical inputs.

“Climate smart agriculture,” on the other hand, still uses fossil fuel-based chemicals. The UN-affiliated Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change recently issued a report advocating a transition to agroecology for its climate change reduction potential, but defined it as a technique that can be used with existing industrial practices like “transgenic crops, conservation farming, microdosing of fertilizers and herbicides, and integrated pest management.” Again, that misses the point. As prominent agroecology scholar Miguel Altieri has recently written, “Agroecology does not need to be combined with other approaches… it has consistently proven capable of sustainably increasing productivity and has far greater potential for fighting hunger [than industrial agriculture].”

Small farmers do well working agroecologically: they produce the same yield or better, they build soil, and they save money on chemical inputs. So agroecology is very profitable. But the profit is decentralized, meaning corporations can’t access it. This would explain why corporations are attempting to disguise a resource grab like “climate smart agriculture” as something ecological, because of its greater potential for consolidating profits.

There are renewed calls at Rio+20 by these same developed nations for “climate smart agriculture,” but as Pat Mooney of the Canadian advocacy organization ETC Group said at an opening workshop of the Peoples’ Summit on Friday, “This is not an issue of whether or not it is nicer to have organic farms and local food systems. This is an issue of whether we will eat.” The closer one looks at “climate smart agriculture,” the more it comes to seem like another false solution to climate change.

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WhyHunger congratulates our partner, the Food Chain Workers Alliance, on its groundbreaking new report, The Hands That Feed Us: Challenges and Opportunities for Workers Along the Food Chain. It’s the first-ever comprehensive report looking at wages and working conditions of workers across the entire food chain – a sector that employs 20 million people in the U.S., comprising one-sixth of the nation’s workforce.  The report exposes that food workers face higher levels of poverty and food insecurity than the rest of the U.S. workforce, while facing discrimination, abuse, and other forms of exploitation.

The report was launched at yesterday’s Food Workers and Food Justice Conference in New York City.  WhyHunger participated and had the opportunity to hear directly from restaurant workers, meatpacking workers, warehouse workers and others. Many have faced unbelievable abuses on the job and were courageously speaking out and joining with other workers across the food chain and allies to bring about change.  These first-hand stories of workers, which are also reflected in the report, are a stark reminder of how far we have to go to achieve a truly fair food system—but are also a testimony to the resilience and capacity for change in those who feed us.

WhyHunger commits to strengthening our solidarity with food and farm workers and encourages everyone in our network to join us.  Raising the minimum wage, supporting paid sick days and enforcing penalties for wage theft are simple policy changes that would have a big impact on reducing hunger and poverty in this country. Read the report, spread the word, and join food chain workers in their struggles for a food system that is fair for all.

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