A Human Rights Vision for Food
In the new report, Bridging the Divide, IATP's Carin Smaller and Sophia Murphy explain how to support a global food system that fulfills human rights obligations. The paper was written as part of the upcoming conference, Confronting the Global Food Challenge, in Geneva, Switzerland.
Speculation Contributed to Global Food Crisis
Excessive speculation in agriculture commodity markets has played a major role in the rise and fall of global food prices, finds a new IATP report.
Ideas for the Next Administration
IATP offers ideas for the Obama administration on how to rejoin the global community and build a fair food and farm system through our work with the Progressive Ideas Network and the Backbone Campaign.
New Book On Immigration and Globalization
Illegal People: How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants, by David Bacon, looks at the way globalization forces many people to migrate, while U.S. immigration policy makes the labor of these displaced people a crime. The connection between labor, migration and the global economy is documented through interviews and on-the-spot reporting.
New Vision for Trade in the U.S.
Over 50 members of Congress have endorsed a new vision for trade that includes a review of existing agreements and principles to guide future trade deals, including support for family farmers in all countries.
Time for a New Global Contract
The collapse of the WTO's Doha talks shows the urgent need for a new system of global rules that prioritizes basic human rights, international development and the environment. IATP's New Global Contract series highlights alternatives to our system of global governance.
Bush Admin Exporting Flawed Food Safety System
A new report by IATP's Steve Suppan finds that the Bush administration's proposed import food safety system prioritizes trade over public health.
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Confronting the Global Food Challenge
IATP and civil society organizations will meet in Geneva, Switzerland on November 24-26, to explore the impact of trade and investment on the right to food and to develop new approaches that put human rights at the core.
Latest edition of Geneva Update
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More WTO documents
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Will the World Be Able to Feed Itself in 2050?
IATP's Sophia Murphy recently gave a talk as part of the One Just World series on why trade is not the solution to food security. Read her blog entry about the forum and the full version of her talk.
NGOs Call for Real Solutions to the Global Food Crisis
Over 230 NGOs, including IATP, outlined five ways to address the global food crisis in a letter to ministers attending the FAO meeting in Rome on food security.
The Food Crisis and Global Institutions
The food crisis should move us toward a new era of global cooperation, one that is democratic and accountable to people and the planet, writes IATP's Alexandra Spieldoch for Foreign Policy in Focus.
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Food Aid Emergency
For people experiencing hunger, a long-term solution to the food crisis won't come quickly enough. The UN and donor countries can make emergency food assistance more effective, writes IATP's Sophia Murphy for Foreign Policy in Focus.
Sustainable Ag vs. Unregulated Markets
When the prices for agriculture commodities skyrocket, long-term issues of sustainability are lost. IATP's Mark Muller explains why green farming and market volatility don't mix.
The WTO and the Food Crisis
In September, IATP convened a high level meeting at the WTO Public Forum to discuss the food crisis. Representatives from the IMF, UN, India's Ambassador to the WTO, the Asia Pacific Network for Food Sovereignty and the Canadian Dairy Farmers participated.
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A Row to Hoe
A study on the impact of trade liberalization on women throughout the world, focusing on the food system, agricultural markets and human rights.
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Rejecting U.S. Food Aid
One of the world's largest charities, CARE, rejected millions of dollars in U.S. food aid because of the system's inefficiency and inability to address long-term causes of hunger. An IATP report looks at those problemsÃ???and offers solutions.
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