Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations(FAO)
|
The Food
and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is a specialised agency of the United Nations that leads international efforts to defeat hunger.
Serving both developed and developing countries, FAO acts as a neutral forum where all nations
meet as equals to negotiate agreements and debate policy. FAO is also a source
of knowledge and information, and helps developing countries and countries in
transition modernize and improve agriculture, forestry and fisheries practices, ensuring good nutrition and food security for all. Its Latin motto, fiat
panis, translates into English as "let there be bread". As of
8 August 2008, FAO has 191 member states along with the European Union, Faroe Islands and Tokelau which are associate members. It is also a member
of the United Nations Development
Group.
Background
The idea of an international organization for food
and agriculture emerged in the late 19th and early 20th century. In May–June
1905, an international conference was held in Rome, Italy, which lead to the creation of an International Agricultural
Institute.
Later in 1943, the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt called a United Nations Conference on Food and
Agriculture. Representatives from forty four governments gathered at the
Homestead Hotel, Hot Springs, Virginia, from 18 May to 3 June. They committed
themselves to founding a permanent organization for food and agriculture, which
happened in Quebec City, Canada on October 16, 1945. The First Session of the FAO
Conference was held in the Chateau Frontenac at Quebec, Canada, from 16 October
to 1 November 1945
The Second World War effectively ended the International Agricultural
Institute, though it was only officially dissolved by resolution of its
Permanent Committee on February 27, 1948. Its functions were then transferred
to the recently established FAO.
Structure
and finance
FAO was established on 16 October 1945, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. In 1951, its headquarters were moved from Washington, D.C., United States, to Rome, Italy. The agency is directed by the Conference of
Member Nations, which meets every two years to review the work carried out by
the organization and to approve a Programme of Work and Budget for the next
two-year period. The Conference elects a council of 49 member states (serve
three-year rotating terms) that acts as an interim governing body, and the
Director-General, that heads the agency.
FAO is composed of eight departments:
Administration and Finance, Agriculture and Consumer Protection, Economic and
Social Development, Fisheries and Aquaculture, Forestry, Knowledge and
Communication, Natural Resource Management and Technical Cooperation.
Beginning in 1994, FAO underwent the most
significant restructuring since its founding, to decentralize operations,
streamline procedures and reduce costs. As result, savings of about US$50
million, €35 million a year were realized.
Budget
FAO's Regular Programme budget is funded by its
members, through contributions set at the FAO Conference. This budget covers
core technical work, cooperation and partnerships including the Technical
Cooperation Programme, knowledge exchange, policy and advocacy, direction and
administration, governance and security.
The FAO regular budget for 2012 - 2013 biennium is
US$1,005.6 million. The voluntary contributions provided by members and other
partners support mechanical and emergency (including rehabilitation) assistance
to governments for clearly defined purposes linked to the results framework, as
well as direct support to FAO's core work. the voluntary contributions are
expected to reach approximately US$1.4 billion in 2012 - 2013.
This overall budget covers core technical work,
cooperation and partnerships, leading to Food and Agriculture Outcomes by 71%;
Core Functions by 11%; the Country Office Network by 5%; Capital and Security
Expenditure by 2%; Administration by 6%; and Technical and Cooperation Program
by 5%.
Directors-general
Deputy
directors-general
Offices
World
headquarters
The world headquarters are located in Rome, in the former seat of the Department of Italian East Africa. One of the most notable features of the building
was the Axum Obelisk which stood in front of the agency seat, although
just outside of the territory allocated to FAO by the Italian Government. It
was taken from Ethiopia by Benito Mussolini's troops in 1937 as a war chest, and returned on
18 April 2005.
Regional
offices
- Regional Office for Africa in Accra, Ghana
- Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean in Santiago, Chile
- Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific in Bangkok, Thailand
- Regional Office for the Near East in Cairo, Egypt
- Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia in Budapest, Hungary
Subregional
offices
- Subregional Office for Southern and East Africa in Harare, Zimbabwe
- Subregional Office for the Pacific Islands in Apia, Samoa
- Subregional Office for Central and Eastern Europe in Budapest, Hungary
- Subregional Office for the Caribbean in Bridgetown, Barbados
- Subregional Office For North Africa in Tunis, Tunisia
- Subregional Office For Central Asia in Ankara, Turkey
- Sub-regional Office for Western Africa (SFW) located in Accra, Ghana
- Sub-regional Office for Eastern Africa (SFE) located in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
- Sub-regional Office for Central Africa (SFC) located in Libreville, Gabon
- Sub-regional Office for Central America (SLM) located in Panama City, Panama
Liaison
offices
- Liaison Office with the United Nations in Geneva
- Liaison Office for North America in Washington D.C.
- Liaison Office with the United Nations in New York
- Liaison Office with Japan in Yokohama
- Liaison Office with the European Union and Belgium in Brussels
Programmes
and achievements
Right to
Food Guidelines
In 2004 the Right to Food Guidelines are
adopted, offering guidance to states on how to implement their obligations on
the right to food.
Response to
food crisis
In December 2007, FAO launched its Initiative on
Soaring Food Prices to help small producers raise their output and earn more.
Under the initiative, FAO contributed to the work of the UN High-Level Task
Force on the Global Food Crisis, which produced the Comprehensive Framework for
Action. FAO has carried out projects in over 25 countries and inter-agency
missions in nearly 60, scaled up its monitoring through the Global Information
and Early Warning System on Food and Agriculture, provided policy advice to
governments while supporting their efforts to increase food production, and
advocated for more investment in agriculture. It has also worked hand-in-hand
with the European Union. One example of its work is a US$10.2 million, €7.5
billion scheme to distribute and multiply quality seeds in Haiti, which has
significantly increased food production, thereby providing cheaper food and
boosting farmers' incomes.
FAO–EU
partnership
In May 2009, FAO and the European Union signed an
initial aid package worth €125 million to support small farmers in countries
hit hard by rising food prices. The aid package falls under the EU’s €1 billion
Food Facility, set up with the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Task Force on
the Global Food Crisis and FAO to focus on programmes that will have a quick
but lasting impact on food security. FAO is receiving a total of around €200
million for work in 25 countries, of which €15.4 million goes to Zimbabwe.
Food
security programmes
The Special Programme for Food Security is FAO's
flagship initiative for reaching the goal of halving the number of hungry in
the world by 2015 (currently estimated at close to 1 billion people), as part
of its commitment to the Millennium Development Goals. Through
projects in over 100 countries worldwide, the programme promotes effective,
tangible solutions to the elimination of hunger, undernourishment and poverty.
Currently 102 countries are engaged in the programme and of these approximately
30 have begun shifting from pilot to national programmes. To maximize the
impact of its work, FAO strongly promotes national ownership and local
empowerment in the countries in which it operates.
Emergency
response
FAO helps countries prevent, mitigate, prepare for
and respond to emergencies. FAO focuses on strengthening capacity for disaster
preparedness and ability to mitigate impact of emergencies on food security, by
forecasting and providing early warning of adverse conditions, assessing needs
and devising programmes which promote the transition from relief to
reconstruction and development, improving analysis of underlying causes of
crises, and strengthening local capacities to cope with risks. An example of
its work was a recent report outlining poor crop prospects in eastern Africa.
Early
warning of food emergencies
FAO’s Global Information and Early Warning System
(GIEWS) monitors world food supply/demand and provides the international
community with prompt information on crop prospects and the food security situation on a global, regional and
country-by-country basis. In case of impending food emergencies, the system
dispatches rapid crop and food supply assessment missions, often jointly with
the World Food Programme, and sometimes as a precursor to further intervention
and assistance.
Integrated
pest management
During the 1990s, FAO took a leading role in the
promotion of integrated pest management for rice
production in Asia. Hundreds of thousands of farmers were trained
using an approach known as the Farmer Field School (FFS). Like many
of the programmes managed by FAO, the funds for Farmer Field Schools came from
bilateral Trust Funds, with Australia, Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland
acting as the leading donors. FAO's efforts in this area have drawn praise from
NGOs that have otherwise criticized much of the work of
the organization.
Transboundary
pests and diseases
FAO established an Emergency Prevention System for Transboundary Animal and Plant Pests
and Diseases in 1994, focusing on the control of diseases like
rinderpest, foot-and-mouth disease and avian flu by helping governments
coordinate their responses. One key element is the Global Rinderpest Eradication Programme, which has advanced to a
stage where large tracts of Asia and Africa have now been free of the cattle disease
rinderpest for an extended period of time. Meanwhile Locust Watch monitors the worldwide locust situation and keeps
affected countries and donors informed of expected developments.
International
Plant Protection Convention
FAO created the International Plant Protection
Convention or IPPC in 1952. This international treaty
organization works to prevent the international spread of pests and plant
diseases. Among its functions are the maintenance of lists of plant pests,
tracking of pest outbreaks, and coordination of technical assistance between
member nations. As of May 2012, 177 governments had adopted the treaty.
Global
Partnership Initiative for Plant Breeding Capacity Building
The Global Partnership Initiative for Plant
Breeding Capacity Building (GIPB) is a global partnership dedicated to
increasing plant breeding capacity building. The mission of GIPB is to enhance
the capacity of developing countries to improve crops for food security and
sustainable development through better plant breeding and delivery systems. The
ultimate goal is to ensure that a critical mass of plant breeders, leaders,
managers and technicians, donors and partners are linked together through an
effective global network. Increasing capacity building for plant breeding in
developing countries is critical for the achievement of meaningful results in
poverty and hunger reduction and to reverse the current worrisome trends. Plant
breeding is a well recognized science capable of widening the genetic and
adaptability base of cropping systems, by combining conventional selection
techniques and modern technologies. It is essential to face and prevent the
recurrence of crises such as that of the soaring food prices and to respond to
the increasing demands for crop based sources of energy.
Codex
Alimentarius
FAO and the World Health Organization created the Codex Alimentarius Commission in 1963 to
develop food standards, guidelines and texts such as codes of practice under
the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards Programme. The main aims of the programme are
protecting consumer health, ensuring fair trade and promoting coordination of
all food standards work undertaken by intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations.
Statistics
The FAO Statistical Division produces FAOSTAT, an on-line multilingual database currently
containing over 3 million time-series records from over 210 countries and
territories covering statistics on agriculture, nutrition, fisheries, forestry,
food aid, land use and population. The Statistical Division also produces data
on World Agricultural Trade Flows. Some of this data comes from projects like Africover.
Investment
in agriculture
FAO's technical cooperation department hosts an
Investment Centre that promotes greater investment in agriculture and rural
development by helping developing countries identify and formulate sustainable
agricultural policies, programmes and projects. It mobilizes funding from
multilateral institutions such as the World Bank, regional development banks
and international funds as well as FAO resources.[citation needed]
TeleFood
Raising awareness about the problem of hunger
mobilizes energy to find a solution. In 1997, FAO launched TeleFood, a campaign
of concerts, sporting events and other activities to harness the power of
media, celebrities and concerned citizens to help fight hunger. Since its
start, the campaign has generated close to US$28 million, €15 million in
donations. Money raised through TeleFood pays for small, sustainable projects
that help small-scale farmers produce more food for their families and communities.
The projects provide tangible resources, such as
fishing equipment, seeds and agricultural implements. They vary enormously,
from helping families raise pigs in Venezuela, through creating school gardens
in Cape Verde and Mauritania or providing school lunches in Uganda and teaching
children to grow food, to raising fish in a leper community in India.
Alliance
Against Hunger and Malnutrition
The Alliance Against Hunger and Malnutrition (AAHM)
aims to address how countries and organizations can be more effective in
advocating and carrying out actions to address hunger and malnutrition. As a
global partnership, AAHM creates global connections between local, regional,
national and international institutions that share the goals of fighting hunger
and malnutrition. The organization works to address food security by enhancing
resources and knowledge sharing and strengthening hunger activities within
countries and across state lines at the regional and international levels.
Following the World Food Summit, the Alliance was
initially created in 2002 as the ‘International Alliance Against Hunger (IAAH)’
to strengthen and coordinate national efforts in the fight against hunger and
malnutrition. The mission of the Alliance originates from the first and eight
UN Millennium Development Goals; reducing the number of people that suffer from
hunger in half by 2015 (preceded by the “Rome Declaration” in 1996) and
developing a global partnership for development. The Alliance was founded by
the Rome based food agencies - the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO), UN World Food Programme (WFP), International Fund for
Agriculture Fund for Development (IFAD), - and Bioversity International.
AAHM connects top-down and bottom-up anti-hunger
development initiatives, linking governments, UN organizations, and NGOs
together in order to increase effectiveness through unity.
FAO Goodwill
Ambassadors
The FAO Goodwill Ambassadors Programme
was initiated in 1999. The main purpose of the programme is to attract public
and media attention to the unacceptable situation that some 1 billion people
continue to suffer from chronic hunger and malnutrition in a time of unprecedented
plenty. These people lead a life of misery and are denied the most basic of
human rights: the right to food. Governments alone cannot end hunger and
undernourishment. Mobilization of the public and private sectors, the
involvement of civil society and the pooling of collective and individual
resources are all needed if people are to break out of the vicious circle of
chronic hunger and undernourishment.
Each of FAO’s Goodwill Ambassadors – celebrities
from the arts, entertainment, sport and academia such as Nobel Prize winner Rita Levi Montalcini, actress Gong Li, the late singer Miriam Makeba, and soccer players Roberto Baggio and Raúl, to name a few – has made a personal and
professional commitment to FAO’s vision: a food-secure world for present and
future generations. Using their talents and influence, the Goodwill Ambassadors
draw the old and the young, the rich and the poor into the campaign against
world hunger. They aim to make Food for All a reality in the 21st century and
beyond.
Online
campaign against hunger
The 1billionhungry project became the EndingHunger
campaign in April 2011. Spearheaded by FAO in partnership with other UN
agencies and private nonprofit groups, the EndingHunger movement pushes the
boundaries of conventional public advocacy. It builds on the success in 2010 of
The 1billonhungry project and the subsequent chain of public events that led to
the collection of over three million signatures on a global petition to end
hunger (www.EndingHunger.org). The petition was originally presented to
representatives of world governments at a ceremony in Rome on 30 November 2010.
The web and partnerships are two pivotal and
dynamic aspects of EndingHunger. The campaign relies on the assistance of
organizations and institutions that can facilitate the project’s diffusion, by
placing banners on their own websites or organizing events aimed to raise
awareness of the project. In its 2011 season, the campaign expanded its
multimedia content, pursued mutual visibility arrangements with partner
organizations, and sharpened its focus on 14-25 year olds, who were encouraged
to understand their potential as a social movement to push for the end of
hunger.
Moreover, the EndingHunger project is a viral
communication campaign, renewing and expanding its efforts to build the
movement through Facebook, Twitter and other social networks. Those who sign the
petition can spread the link of the EndingHunger website to their friends, via
social media or mail, in order to gain awareness and signatures for the
petition. The next interim objective is to grow the EndingHunger movement’s
Facebook community to 1 million members. As with the petition, the more people
who get involved, the more powerful the message to governments: “We are no
longer willing to accept the fact that hundreds of millions live in chronic
hunger.” Groups and individuals can also decide on their own to organize an
event about the project, simply by gathering friends, whistles, t-shirts and
banners (whistles and t-shirts can be ordered, and petition sign sheets
downloaded, on the endinghunger.org website) and thereby alert people about
chronic hunger by using the yellow whistle.
The original 1billionhungry campaign borrowed as
its slogan the line "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this
anymore!", used by Peter Finch in the 1976 film, Network. Meanwhile, the yellow whistle has been the
campaign symbol from the start, from 1billionhungry to Ending Hunger. (The
creative concept was provided by the McCann Erickson Italy Communication
Agency.) It symbolizes the fact that we are “blowing the whistle” on the silent
disaster of hunger. It is both a symbol and – at many live events taking place
around the world – a physical means of expressing frustration and making some
noise about the hunger situation.
Both The 1billionhungry and the EndingHunger
campaigns have continued to attract UN Goodwill Ambassadors from the worlds of
music and cinema, literature, sport, activism and government. Some of the well
known individuals who have become involved include former Brazilian President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, former presidents of Chile Ricardo Lagos and
Michelle Bachelet, actress Susan Sarandon, actors Jeremy Irons and Raul Bova,
singers Céline Dion and Anggun, authors Isabelle Allende and Andrea Camilleri,
musician Chucho Valdés and Olympic track-and-field legend Carl Lewis.
FAO renewal
A comprehensive programme of organizational reform
and culture change began in 2008 after the release of an Independent External
Evaluation. Headquarters restructuring and delegation of decision making has
created a flatter more responsive structure and reduced costs. Modernizing and
streamlining of administrative and operational processes are under way. Improved
internal teamwork and closer external partnerships coupled with upgrading of IT
infrastructure and greater autonomy of FAO's decentralized offices allows the
Organization to respond quickly where needs are greatest. As FAO is primarily a
knowledge based organization, investing in human resources is a top priority.
Capacity building including a leadership programme, employee rotation and a new
junior professional programme has been established. Individual performance
management, an ethics officer and an independent office of evaluation are
designed to improve performance through learning and strengthened oversight.
DAD-IS
The FAO hosts DAD-IS, the Domestic Animal Diversity
Information System, a communication and information tool for the
management of animal genetic resources which provides the user with searchable
databases of breed-related information, management tools, and contacts for the
Regional and National Coordinators for the Management of Animal Genetic
Resources programme.
Membership
The non-member states are Brunei, Liechtenstein, Singapore,[27] Vatican City and the states with limited recognition.[28]
Some countries may denote specific representatives
to the FAO, for instance the United States Ambassador to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations, who has ambassador rank and is also part of the United States Mission to the UN Agencies in Rome.
FAO member states
FAO associates
Criticism
1970s, 80s,
90s
There has been public criticism of FAO for at least
30 years. Dissatisfaction with the organisation's performance was among the
reasons for the creation of two new organisations after the World Food
Conference in 1974, namely the World Food Council and the International Fund for Agricultural
Development; by the early eighties there was intense rivalry
among these organisations. At
the same time, the World Food Programme, which started as an experimental 3-year programme
under FAO, was growing in size and independence, with the Directors of FAO and
WFP struggling for power.
Early in 1989, the organisation came under attack
from the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank based in Washington, D.C. The Foundation wrote that The sad fact is that the FAO has become essentially irrelevant in
combating hunger. A bloated bureaucracy known for the mediocrity of its work
and the inefficiency of its staff the FAO in recent years has become
increasingly politicised. In September of the same year, the journal Society published a series of articles about FAO that
included a contribution from the Heritage Foundation and a response by FAO
staff member, Richard Lydiker, who was later described by the Danish Minister for Agriculture
(who had herself resigned from the organisation) as 'FAO's chief spokesman for
non-transparency'.
Edouard Saouma, the Director-General of FAO, was also criticised
in Graham Hancock's book 'Lords of Poverty, published in 1989.
Mention is made of Saouma's 'fat pay packet', his 'autocratic' management
style, and his 'control over the flow of public information'. Hancock concluded
that "One gets the sense from all
of this of an institution that has lost its way, departed from its purely
humanitarian and developmental mandate, become confused about its place in the
world – about exactly what it is doing, and why". Despite the
criticism, Edouard Saouma served as DG for three consecutive terms from 1976 to
1993.
In 1990, the US State Department expressed the view
that "The Food and Agriculture
Organization has lagged behind other UN organizations in responding to US
desires for improvements in program and budget processes to enhance value for
money spent".
A year later, in 1991, The Ecologist magazine produced a special issue under the
heading "The UN Food and Agriculture Organization: Promoting World
Hunger".[36] The magazine included articles that questioned
FAO's policies and practices in forestry, fisheries, aquaculture, and pest control. The articles were written by experts such as Helena Norberg-Hodge, Vandana Shiva, Edward Goldsmith, Miguel A. Altieri and Barbara Dinham.
In 1996, FAO organised the World Food Summit, attended by 112 Heads or Deputy Heads of State
and Government. The Summit concluded with the signing of the Rome Declaration, which established the goal of halving the number
of people who suffer from hunger by the year 2015. At the same time, 1,200 Civil Society
Organisations (CSOs) from 80 countries participated in an NGO forum. The forum was critical of the growing
industrialisation of agriculture and called upon governments — and FAO — to do
more to protect the 'Right to Food' of the poor.
Since 2000
The next Food Summit organised by FAO in 2002 was
considered to be a waste of time by many of the official participants. Social
movements, farmers, fisherfolk, pastoralists, indigenous peoples,
environmentalists, women's organisations, trade unions and NGOs expressed their
collective disappointment in, and
rejection of the official Declaration of the... Summit.
In 2004, FAO produced a controversial report called
'Agricultural Biotechnology: meeting the needs of the poor?'. The report
claimed that "agricultural biotechnology has real potential as a new tool in the war on
hunger". In response to the report, more than 650 organisations from
around the world signed an open letter in which they said "FAO has broken its commitment to civil
society and peasants' organisations". The letter complained that
organisations representing the interests of farmers had not been consulted,
that FAO was siding with the biotechnology industry and, consequently, that the
report "raises serious questions about the independence and intellectual
integrity of an important United Nations agency".[42] The Director General of FAO responded immediately,
stating that decisions on biotechnology must "be taken at the international level by competent bodies"
(in other words, not by non-governmental organizations). He
acknowledged, however, that "biotechnology
research is essentially driven by the world's top ten transnational corporations" and "the
private sector protects its results with patents in order to earn from
its investment and it concentrates on products that have no relevance to food
in developing countries".
In May 2006, a British newspaper published the
resignation letter of Louise Fresco, one of eight Assistant Directors-General
of FAO. In her letter, the widely respected Dr Fresco stated that "the Organisation has been unable to adapt to
a new era", that "our
contribution and reputation have declined steadily" and "its leadership has not proposed bold options
to overcome this crisis".
October 2006 saw delegates from 120 countries
arrive in Rome for the 32nd Session of FAO's Committee on World Food Security.
The event was widely criticised by Non-Government Organisations, but largely
ignored by the mainstream media. Oxfam called for an end to the talk-fests while Via Campesina issued a statement that criticised FAO's policy of
Food Security.
On 18 October 2007, the final report of an
Independent External Evaluation of FAO was published. More than 400 pages in
length, the evaluation was the first of its kind in the history of the
Organization. It had been commissioned by decision of the 33rd Session of the
FAO Conference in November 2005. The report concluded that "The Organization is today in a
financial and programme crisis" but "the problems affecting the Organization today can all be
solved"
Among the problems noted by the IEE: "The Organization has been conservative
and slow to adapt", "FAO
currently has a heavy and costly bureaucracy" and "The capacity of the Organization is
declining and many of its core competencies are now imperiled".
Among the solutions: "A new Strategic Framework", "institutional culture change and reform of administrative and
management systems".
The official response from FAO came on 29 October: "Management supports the principal
conclusion in the report of the IEE on the need for 'reform with growth' so as
to have an FAO 'it for this century'".
Meanwhile, hundreds of FAO staff signed a petition
in support of the IEE recommendations, calling for " a radical shift in management culture and spirit,
depoliticization of appointments, restoration of trust between staff and
management, [and] setting strategic priorities of the organization".
In conclusion the IEE stated that, "If FAO did
not exist it would need to be invented".
In November 2008, a Special Conference of FAO
member countries agreed a US$42.6 million (€38.6 million), three-year Immediate
Plan of Action for "reform with growth" as recommended by an
Independent External Evaluation (IEE).
Under the plan US$21.8 million, €15 million will be
spent next year on overhauling the financial procedures, hierarchies and human
resources management.
World food
crisis
In May 2008, while talking about the ongoing world food crisis, President Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal expressed the opinion that FAO was "a waste of money" and "we must scrap it". Mr Wade
said that FAO was itself largely to blame for the price rises, and that the
organisation's work was duplicated by other bodies that operated more
efficiently, like the UN's International Fund for
Agricultural Development. However, this criticism may have had more to do
with personal animosity between the President and the Director-General, himself
a Senegalese, particularly in light of the significant differences in the work
carried out by the two organizations.
In 2008, the FAO sponsored the High-Level Conference on World
Food Security. The summit was notable for the lack of agreement over
the issue of biofuels.
The response to the summit among Non-governmental organizations was mixed,
with Oxfam stating that "the summit in Rome was an important first step in tackling the
food crisis but greater action is now needed", while Maryam
Rahmanian of Iran’s Centre for Sustainable Development said "We are dismayed and disgusted to see
the food crisis used to further the policies that have led us to the food
crisis in the first place”.
As with previous food summits, civil society
organizations held a parallel meeting and issued their own declaration to "reject the corporate industrial and
energy-intensive model of production and consumption that is the basis of
continuing crises"
There is a book out about the management of the
organization: "U.N. a Cosa Nostra" available on Amazon.com. FAO has
tried so far unsuccessfully to prevent its publication.
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