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ULTURE

rld Economic Forum and the corporate


eover of the global governance of our food
tems

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Mar 3, 2020
by Shiney Varghese (/about/sta /shiney-varghese)

IATP joins (https://www.foodsovereignty.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/EN_Edited_draft-letter-UN-food-systems-


summit_070220-4.pdf ) hundreds of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) from around the world to condemn the rumors
about a World Economic Forum (WEF) driven Food Systems Summit under the auspices of the United Nations
(U.N.). If true, it poses a very direct threat to the U.N. Committee on World Food Security (U.N. CFS) — the foremost
inclusive, democratic and multilateral mechanism (http://www.fao.org/policy-support/mechanisms/mechanisms-
details/en/c/426373/) involved in setting global governance of food and agriculture.
While the U.N. is an imperfect and at times problematic institution for global governance, it is also a contested space
where vulnerable nations and civil society have worked together to advance the interests of marginalized
communities, through advancing fundamental rights such as the right to water
(https://www.un.org/press/en/2010/ga10967.doc.htm), the rights of the indigenous peoples
(https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/606782/files/A_RES_61_295-EN.pdf ) and the rights of the peasants
(https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/1661560/files/A_RES_73_165-EN.pdf ) at the U.N. General Assembly, as well as
developing normative principles and guidelines for all actors in the food systems at the U.N. CFS
(http://www.fao.org/cfs/home/products/en/) — all in the last 15 years. Two examples of U.N. CFS led initiatives are:
The Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries, and Forests in the Context of
National Food Security (2011) — also referred to as the Tenure Guidelines — and the Principles for Responsible
Investment in Agriculture and Food Systems (2014). The 1990s and early 2000s also saw the U.N. as a space for
advancing calls for legally binding instruments for transnational corporations.
Yet, in recent decades, these inclusive initiatives have been under siege. The power of transnational corporations has
increased manifold, and they are positioning themselves as problem solvers to current global challenges. Their power
is exemplified in the new prominence (https://www.weforum.org/press/2019/06/world-economic-forum-and-un-sign-
strategic-partnership-framework/) of the WEF. Started almost 50 years ago, the WEF has emerged as the key space
for decision makers and corporate leaders to roll out initiatives around global public goods
(https://www.weforum.org/platforms/shaping-the-future-of-global-public-goods) — water, food and climate — to
other platforms (https://www.weforum.org/platforms), seeking to shape the future of a wide range of sectors. These
range from manufacturing and production, urban services, media and digital economy to health, mobility and
infrastructure. The list is long, and the ambition to shape the future of humanity seems limitless.
Around the world, conflicts are increasing between transnational corporations on one side and small-scale producers
and other marginalized communities on the other. The stakes go beyond specific struggles to setting the rules and
norms around food systems, the environment and public goods. It is in this context that IATP joins allies in expressing
our concerns (https://www.foodsovereignty.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/EN_Edited_draft-letter-UN-food-
systems-summit_070220-4.pdf ) regarding the projected role of WEF in the 2021 Food Summit, and especially the role
of its new vision for agriculture (http://climateinitiativesplatform.org/index.php/New_Vision_for_Agriculture) and
related initiatives in global food and agricultural governance.
25 years ago, when food was not an issue for the movers and shakers of the WEF, IATP joined other CSOs from around
the world in Rome for the World Food Summit (1996). Since then we all have been building alliances around a shared
vision of an alternative food and agricultural system centered around people’s right to nurture their own agriculture and
food systems and protect their resource base — land, water, seeds and biodiversity. We have also been working
together to build our capacity to e ectively participate in and contribute to global rule making. We join our allies today
to raise our concerns regarding the corporate takeover of the global food and agricultural governance agenda that
threatens the norms, rules and policies protecting people’s right to nurture their own agriculture and food systems and
protect their resource base.
In 1996, the organizers of the Summit sought the participation of CSOs along with others perceived to be defending
the rights of the world's citizens to be free from hunger. The U.N. statement said
(http://www.fao.org/monitoringprogress/partners_en.html) at the time, “No single government, organization or group
can eliminate hunger on its own. FAO counts on the collaboration of world leaders, research organizations, farmers
groups, charities and individual citizens to defend the rights of the world's citizens to be free from hunger.” Note the
absence of any reference to the private sector as a defender of “the rights of the world's citizens to be free from
hunger.”
It is ironic then, that for the U.N. Food Summit twenty-five years later, the U.N. Secretary General opted to appoint Ms.
Agnes Kalibata, an avid promoter of private sector participation in food governance as the U.N. special envoy. Kalibata
is not only a member of the Global Agenda Council (now known as Global Future Council) of the World Economic
Forum, but also is the president of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) — a Gates Foundation-funded
group. In that role Kalibata led the (https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/personnel-appointments/2019-12-16/ms-
agnes-kalibata-of-rwanda-special-envoy-for-2021-food-systems-summit) “the organization’s e orts with public and
private partners.” And these e orts, according to authors of the letter (https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/revoke-agra-
agnes-kalibata-special-envoy-2021-un-food-systems-summit) addressed to U.N. secretary general, “have centered on
capturing and diverting public resources to benefit large corporate interests.” The letter
(https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/revoke-agra-agnes-kalibata-special-envoy-2021-un-food-systems-summit), signed
by 176 organisations working in Africa and their allies, calls on the U.N. Secretary General to “Revoke AGRA’s Agnes
Kalibata as Special Envoy to 2021 U.N. Food Systems Summit.”
Revoking this appointment can only be a very first step in acknowledging the concerns raised by the civil society. In
order to address the real issues around the corporate attempt to shape governance of food systems and to help
“defend the rights of the world's citizens to be free from hunger
(http://www.fao.org/monitoringprogress/partners_en.html),” the U.N. secretary general must ensure that this initiative
relies on the proven leadership and inclusive structure of the CFS in setting food policy that respects human rights.
That kind of democratic participation, which gives the private sector a role alongside (but not above) civil society, must
guide the 2021 U.N. Food Summit.
Share the letter (https://www.foodsovereignty.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/EN_Edited_draft-letter-UN-food-
systems-summit_070220-4.pdf) from hundreds of civil society organizations from across the world, raising their
concerns with the U.N. Secretary General. Read it here (https://www.foodsovereignty.org/wp-
content/uploads/2020/02/EN_Edited_draft-letter-UN-food-systems-summit_070220-4.pdf), and to sign, please
click here (http://comms.evlink9.net/servlet/link/39068/542079/78353728/1773422).

Filed under: Agriculture (/agriculture2)


Corporate control (/keyword/corporate-control), United Nations (/keyword/united-nations)

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