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16 February 2007


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Agricultural research must change radically to realise people's right to food

Farmers and other citizens involved in a major effort to radically change the way the world thinks about food and agriculture will gather this month at an international conference in Mali.

The progress of this growing movement could have profound implications for scientific research, politics, trade and the fight against the twin curses of poverty and environmental degradation. At its centre is a fledgling concept in international policy debates: 'food sovereignty'.

But according to a report written for the meeting, food sovereignty will not be achieved unless there is a fundamental change in the way that knowledge is produced and used in policymaking.

"'Food sovereignty' is all about ensuring that farmers are in control of what they farm and how they farm it," says the report's author, Dr Michel Pimbert of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).

"It is about supporting domestic markets and small-scale agricultural production, and it is about conserving agricultural biodiversity and resilient farming systems. At the heart of 'food sovereignty' is the idea that communities have the right to define their own agricultural, pastoral, labour, fishing, food and land policies to suit their own ecological, social, economic and cultural circumstances."

"We need a radical shift away from the existing top-down and increasingly corporate controlled research systems to an approach which devolves more responsibility and decision-making power to farmers, indigenous peoples, food workers, consumers and citizens."

Pimbert says the "liberating potential" of science and technology can enhance agricultural production, reduce the environmental impacts of farming, ensure public health and improve livelihoods for the poor.

But he says local people and citizens should be the ones who decide which new policies and technologies are needed when, where and under what conditions. He also stresses the need to transform knowledge — using ecology as the basis for sustainable agriculture and de-colonialising economics from narrow definitions of wealth.

"This will require more direct citizen participation in decisions about new technologies, research priorities and policies for food and farming," he says.

"Conventional agricultural research must be reorganised for greater democratic oversight and priority setting to combine the strengths of farmers and scientists in the search for fair, sustainable and locally adapted food systems. Transforming agricultural research is also increasingly necessary to ensure that the food we eat keeps us healthy."

Representatives of farmers' groups will be among the 500 delegates who gather in Sélingué in Mali, for the International Forum on Food Sovereignty on 23-27 February. The meeting, organised by an alliance that includes Friends of the Earth International, the World Forum of Fisher Peoples and Via Campesina, is intended to advance work on a global strategy to ensure that food sovereignty is considered and applied at international and local policy levels.

On 17-21 February, in advance of the Sélingué meeting, Pimbert and IIED partners from India, Indonesia, Iran and Peru will be facilitating an international workshop in Bamako for farmers' groups from across West Africa with the francophone organisation BEDE and the CNOP. The CNOP is an umbrella organisation representing Malian farmers, and the organiser of the Bamako workshop and a co-organiser the meeting in Sélingué.

"The workshop will bring farmers together from around the world for mutual learning," says Pimbert. "It will focus on the privatisation of farmers' knowledge and genetic resources, and on alternative ways of democratising research and the governance of food systems. West African farmers want to learn more about these issues so that they can better claim and realise their rights to food sovereignty."

"Both the Bamako workshop and the Sélingué meeting will be discussing food and farming very differently to the way that mainstream organisations such as the UN Food and Agriculture Organization do," says Malamine Coulibaly of the CNOP.

"Agricultural policies imposed by the World Trade Organisation, World Bank and International Monetary Fund have failed to sustain biodiversity important for food and agriculture. Their policies have also marginalised peoples’ knowledge and their customary institutions, thereby undermining rural livelihoods and food security," says Coulibaly. "Neoliberal policies have sidelined the needs and concerns of the world’s farmers, many of whom live in stark and deepening poverty. Their voices must be heard to realize every person’s right to food."

link to full report

Dr Michel Pimbert is available for interview in English or French. Michel.Pimbert@iied.org

Mali cell phone number +223 6218437

Mr Malamine Coulibaly is available for interview in French. Tel: +223 6749718

Mr Robert Ali Brac de la Perriere (BEDE) is available for interview in French. Tel: +223 6637383

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:


Mike Shanahan
Press Officer
International Institute for Environment and Development
Email: mike.shanahan@iied.org
Tel: +44 (0)20 7872 7308
Fax: +44 (0)20 7388 2826
http://www.iied.org

NOTES TO EDITORS

The report will be available on IIED's website on 16 February 2007. To request an electronic version of the report in advance, please contact mike.shanahan@iied.org

The International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) is an independent, non-profit research institute. Set up in 1971 and based in London, IIED provides expertise and leadership in researching and achieving sustainable development (see: http://www.iied.org).

Dr Michel Pimbert is the director of IIED's Sustainable Agriculture, Biodiversity and Livelihoods programme. To read more about the programme's work on food sovereignty and democratising the governance of food systems, see:
http://www.iied.org/NR/agbioliv/ag_liv_projects/
ReclaimingDiversityandCitizenship2.html

Mr. Malamine Coulibaly is the General Secretary of the CNOP,- the Coordination Nationale des Organisations Paysannes in Mali. See http://www.cnop-mali.org/

Robert Ali Brac de la Perriere is the coordinator of BEDE, a French non governmental organisation. BEDE facilitates farmer exchanges and documentation of experiences on alternatives to industrial agriculture. See: http://www.bede-asso.org

IIED's international partners are the Center for Sustainable Development and Environment (CENESTA) in Iran (www.cenesta.org/); Farmer Initiatives for Ecological Literacy and Democracy (FIELD) in Indonesia (www.thefieldalliance.org); In India, the Deccan Development Society and the Krishi Vikas Kendra (a State government research body) for the Telengana region (www.ddsindia.com/www/default.asp); and in Peru, ANDES, the Quechua-Aymara Association for Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development (www.andes.org.pe/).

The Convention on Biological Diversity calls for the "mobilization of farming communities, including indigenous and local communities, for the development, maintenance and use of their knowledge and practices in the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity in the agricultural sector" and encourage countries "to set up and maintain local level forums for farmers, researchers, extension workers and other stakeholders to evolve genuine partnerships".

Details of the meeting in Mali are available online at: http://www.nyeleni2007.org/spip.php?article94

Journalists wishing to attend the meeting should contact: contact@nyeleni2007.org
Tel international : +33 870 467 123 - Mali : + 223 228 74 15 / 272 34 88


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