Food Security: institutional dimensions ODI, 4 July 2001

Similar documents
DELIVERY. Channels and implementers CHAPTER

The Cluster Approach in NBC

Terms of Reference for the Humanitarian Coordinator (2003)

EN CD/15/R3 Original: English Adopted

OPINION. of the European Economic and Social Committee on the Role of civil society in European development policy

Introduction to Cluster System

HUMANITARIAN. Health 9 Coordination 10. Shelter 7 WASH 6. Not specified 40 OECD/DAC

No Masterpiece of Political Will

DEFINITION OF EMERGENCIES

Red Mandates. Mandate Title Mandate description Purpose

Oxfam (GB) Guiding Principles for Response to Food Crises

A Dangerous Delay. The cost of late response to early warnings in the 2011 drought in the Horn of Africa

WINDHOEK DECLARATION A NEW PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN THE SOUTHERN AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY AND THE INTERNATIONAL CORPORATING PARTNERS

IASC Transformative Agenda. Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) Slide 1

Introduction to OCHA and the Humanitarian Environment

Multilateral Aid Review: Assessment of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)

South Sudan First Quarterly Operational Briefing. Presentation to the WFP Executive Board

Madam Chair, Distinguished Delegates, Ladies and Gentlemen

OI Policy Compendium Note on Humanitarian Co-ordination

NOHA WINTER SCHOOL Humanitarian Development Nexus

The EU in Geneva. The EU and the UN. EU committed to effective multilateralism. EU major contributor to the UN

Finding durable solutions

Statement by the United Nations High Commissioner of the Office for Human Rights

CALL FOR ACTION FINAL 19 May 2017

HOW TO MEASURE AND MONITOR HOMELESSNESS AT EU LEVEL

Update on WFP s Role in Collective Humanitarian Response

General Debate. Statement by Maria Luisa Silva Director UNDP Office in Geneva. 5 October Assembly Hall Palais des Nations

Kenya. Strategy for Sweden s development cooperation with MFA

The G20 as a Summit Process: Including New Agenda Issues such as Human Security. Paul James

General Assembly UNITED NATIONS. Distr. GENERAL. A/AC.96/ August Original: ENGLISH

HUMANITARIAN. Not specified 92 OECD/DAC

SOMALIA. Working environment. Planning figures. The context

G8 MIYAZAKI INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION I. EFFORTS FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION -- A BASIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK --

CESCR General Comment No. 12: The Right to Adequate Food (Art. 11)

ERC John Holmes Address for the Informal Intergovernmental Consultations on the High-Level Panel on System-wide Coherence 20 June 2007.

Afghanistan. Main Objectives

Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies

The Swedish Government s action plan for to implement Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) on women, peace and security

AFGHANISTAN. Overview Working environment

Coordination of Humanitarian and Development Assistance in Jordan

Partnership Framework

The international institutional framework

PAKISTAN - COMPLEX EMERGENCY

MALAYSIA Statement. Mr. President, Excellencies, Distinguished Delegates, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Migration. I would like, both personally and on behalf of Ireland to thank the IOM for their

A PRIMER TO THE RIGHT TO ADEQUATE FOOD LESSON 6. THE RIGHT TO FOOD GUIDELINES

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION

- ISSUES NOTE - Joint Special Event on the Food and Economic Crises in Post-Conflict Countries

Statement by Mr José Graziano da Silva, FAO Director-General. World Humanitarian Summit 2016 Plenary Session

OFFICIAL STATEMENT BY H.E. LÜTFİ ELVAN, MINISTER OF DEVELOPMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF TURKEY

The Lisbon Agenda and the External Action of the European Union

Danish Organisation Strategy for The World Food Programme

Framework for Action. One World, One Future. Ireland s Policy for International Development. for

MALAWI TESTIMONIES. By getting this assistance, I was able to feed my family properly. Estor Elliott

Meeting in the Council for Development Policy 28 November 2017 Agenda item 4

~~~ i ~ UNHCR. the Director-General,

115 Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role

Civil Society Reaction to the Joint Communication A Partnership for Democracy and Shared Prosperity

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT ON REGIONAL PROTECTION PROGRAMMES

Catalan Cooperation By Xavier Martí González, Joint coordinator of Cooperation Areas, Catalan International Development Cooperation Agency, Spain

Ouagadougou Action Plan to Combat Trafficking in Human Beings, Especially Women and Children As adopted by the Ministerial Conference on Migration

Discussion paper: Multi-stakeholders in Refugee Response: a Whole-of- Society Approach?

Camp Coordination & Camp Management (CCCM) Officer Profile

The United Nations Trust Fund for Human Security (UNTFHS)

Emergency preparedness and response

Annex 1. Outcome document Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects

Contribution to the United Nations Global Compact on Refugees: Lessons from the 1989 International Conference on Refugees in Central America (CIREFCA)

A/CONF.192/2006/PC/WP.2

HUMANITARIAN. Food 42 OECD/DAC

Annex Joint meeting of the Executive Boards of UNDP/UNFPA, the United Nations Children s Fund and the World Food Programme

2. Framing the debate

The Doha Development Round & International Food Aid. Steven Anderson. Drake Undergraduate Social Science Journal. Spring 2009

Sweden s national commitments at the World Humanitarian Summit

SOMALIA. Overview. Working environment

11559/13 YML/ik 1 DG C 1

The impacts of the global financial and food crises on the population situation in the Arab World.

Humanitarian Aid. Humanitarian aid is the assistance given to people in distress by individuals,

HUMANITARIAN. Health 11. Not specified 59 OECD/DAC

CARTAGENA ACTION PLAN : ENDING THE SUFFERING CAUSED BY ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES

UNDAF Results Matrix Sri Lanka

Humanitarian Operations Exercise

1. IDENTIFICATION Support for Municipal Finance in Lebanon CRIS number ENPI 2011/22758 Total cost Total estimated cost: EUR

Sri Lanka. Operational highlights. Working environment. Persons of concern

Sri Lanka. Persons of concern

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page. 1. Introduction The Current Situation In Afghanistan Refugees in neighboring countries 5

Danish Organisation Strategy for World Food Programme (WFP)

SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC. Overview. Working environment GLOBAL APPEAL 2015 UPDATE

PAKISTAN - COMPLEX EMERGENCY

9420/15 kp/fh 1 DG C 2C

NATIONAL FORUM ON CHILD POVERTY AND SOCIAL PROTECTION IN MALI: REPORT OF THE RESULTS OF 4 CONSENSUS BUILDING SCOPE OF WORK

THE NGO S EXPERIENCE IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN 2030 CONFERENCE (23 24 MARCH 2017: ICC -EAST LONDON)

The future of financing for WHO 2010 DENMARK

Towards a new partnership between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific countries after 2020

Update on coordination issues: strategic partnerships

Kingdom of Cambodia National Committee for Disaster Management (NCDM) M. Saohorn

THE GLOBAL IDP SITUATION IN A CHANGING HUMANITARIAN CONTEXT

Joint Declaration on ASEAN-REPUBLIC OF KOREA strategic partnership for peace and prosperity

RESOLUTION. Euronest Parliamentary Assembly Assemblée parlementaire Euronest Parlamentarische Versammlung Euronest Парламентская Aссамблея Евронест

PAMUN XVIII RESEARCH REPORT MEASURES TO STRENGTHEN COORDINA- TION OF HUMANITARIAN AID IN RESPONSE TO EMERGENCIES

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY

Transcription:

Food Security: institutional dimensions ODI, 4 July 2001 This presentation is based on Food and Human Security:Retrospective and an Agenda for Change Chapter 16 of Edward Clay and Olav Stokke edited, Food Aid and Human Security, EADI Book Series 24 Frank Cass, London 407pp ISBN 071468125-3 (paper) Copies of the paperback version of this book are available from ODI Publication Department for 18.50 (+p&p) - publications@odi.org.uk

Ensuring an enabling environment is the first of the seven areas of commitment in the Declaration of the World Food Summit (WFS) in 1996. That implies an appropriate set of institutional arrangements at an international as well as national level. Currently institutional change appears to be difficult, if not blocked at an international level. Nevertheless, it is still necessary to think about what sorts of institutional arrangements are required at an international level, involving multi-lateral bodies and agencies to facilitate food security for the food insecure. The intention should be to build an agenda for institutional change that could be attempted during the next five to ten years. These more appropriate, stronger arrangements will then contribute to addressing food insecurity in the subsequent decade The FAO secretariat itself in a background document for the recent committee on World Food Security acknowledges: There is a need to make a careful examination of the adequacy of current institutional arrangements for international cooperation for addressing major global challenges to food security. (FAO Committee on World Food Security, New Challenges to the Achievements of the World Food Summit Goals, 27 th session, 28 th May - 1 st June 2001,Rome, paragraph 65) 2

Mandates and responsibilities the issue of coherence At least 12 international agencies have some role in food security Few recent changes in institutional arrangements Complex arrangements make international action difficult to achieve the WFS did not address this issue 3

Food Aid - an Example Most arrangements date from the 1960s and 1970s

Minimum commitments Food Aid Conventions since 1967 IGC Food Aid Committee

General food security policy FAO Committee on Food Security

Free trade principles WTO since 1994 FAO Committee on surplus disposal since 1955

Wider food aid policy issues and supervision of WFP WFP Executive Board

Humanitarian issues UN Office of Conflict and Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) UNHCR UNICEF plus the Red Cross Federation and international NGOs 9

Food aid agencies The World Food Programme is the main international channel for food aid. It has become progressively more involved in supplying humanitarian relief as a response to EVENTS : 1972-74; 1979; 1984; 1995 WFP continues to see a role for food aid in combating chronic hunger and supporting development 10

1400 Figure 3: Distribution of food aid through WFP 1200 1000 US$ (millionnes 800 600 400 200 0 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 199 6 1997 1998 Development PROs Emergencies 11

What are the Options for change? 12

Repackaging or Model T Food Aid Using new labels - making formal statements about new sets of objectives. Continuing to provide the same products in more or less the same way. This is not is not a genuine change. 13

Adaptation of existing arrangements more flexibility in the use of food aid; and more integration with other aid instruments. 14

There are two problems temporary re-emergence of surpluses, as in 1998-9, leads to WFP and NGOs handling more food aid without complementary resources, Current mismatch of many institutions and arrangements might not be resolved. 15

Reconstruction Address wider problems of poverty and food security based on a human right to food

Restructure food aid Replace FAC quantitative commitments by qualitative commitments to provide humanitarian relief and assist recovery; Agree an international Code of Conduct to reflect qualitative commitments, Merge WTO Marrakesh Decision on food import issues with the broader problems of low-income countries adapting to liberalisation; Streamline institutional arrangements; Reconstitute WFP as the UN s humanitarian and rehabilitation logistics and food support agency; People-centred regular assessments of humanitarian and crisis needs involving food aid. 17

Overall - the challenge lies in Agreeing a specific set of objectives for food assistance and linking them to those for food security. Mobilising and sustaining a coalition for institutional change Acknowledging and overcoming the real obstacles to change: 18

Obstacles to change the view that it is possible to simultaneously promote domestic agricultural interests and address global humanitarian and developmental concerns without tradeoffs; - bureaucratic resistance to changes that narrow institutional mandates; - the people and institutions of developing countries have to become involved in ways that enable them to recognise the advantages of change. 19