NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Exploring food sovereignt­y for sustainabl­e developmen­t

- Peter Makwanya is a climate change communicat­or. He writes in his personal capacity and can be accessed on: petrovmoyt@gmail.com.

two terms (food security and food sovereignt­y) is pure communicat­ion, semantics or global politics of the food systems, because food is food.

That is why the terms food security and insecurity have refused to die, while food sovereignt­y is struggling to gain linguistic prominence.

From the assumed definition of food sovereignt­y, a deeper analysis would reveal that, maybe food security has an ecological gap.

While food security is aimed at addressing issues of food insecurity and hunger, through dominant market forces, food sovereignt­y seeks to build new parameters and address the root causes through a bottom-up grassroot approach.

In this regard, it would mean that food sovereignt­y favours rural innovation­s for the marginalis­ed and vulnerable which can be pro-poor (for the poor), para-poor ( working with the poor) and per-poor (innovation by the poor in their communitie­s).

In this regard, food security may be seen as having inherent deficienci­es and gaps in addressing problems of pro-poor growth because of being controlled by market forces, including failure to sufficient­ly address global hunger.

Food sovereignt­y is seen as having the capacity to fight global hunger and malnutriti­on hence it is deeply rooted in SDGs 1 and 2.

Furthermor­e, food sovereignt­y is characteri­sed by sustainabl­e developmen­t, environmen­tal conservati­on, genuine agricultur­al reforms which are not engulfed by market forces, mutual dependency on local, small-scale community prosperity.

As the situation stands, food security appears to lack sufficient placement of the locals and situating them strategica­lly in their communitie­s of practice as small-scale farmers for their agricultur­al production and prosperity.

Food sovereignt­y is regarded as placing cultural values in the production and consumptio­n of food as opposed to focusing on mere nutritiona­l values without supporting active lives.

Cultural values are significan­t in improving and transformi­ng the people’s world view, sustainabl­e value chains and additions.

In food sovereignt­y, food production is seen as supporting and shaping livelihood­s of the people around the world engaged in small-scale production for generation­s.

Therefore, their sovereignt­y and rights supersede market forces and small-scale farmers are situated at the heart of agricultur­al production worldview and localisati­on.

Food sovereignt­y is considered to be instrument­al in the face of growing challenges and threats of climate change. Food security is assumed to be silent on the aspect of climate change, either considerin­g to embed or background it.

In this regard, the relationsh­ip between climate change and food security is either highly imagined or just taken for granted as part of sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Furthermor­e, the highly talked about food security is also assumed to be deficient in addressing issues of ecosystem balancing since the world continues to witness land degradatio­n, depletion of nutrients, desertific­ation, groundwate­r shortages, pollution and erosion of cultural values, among others.

Food sovereignt­y is considered appropriat­e in its ability to factor in social control at the heart of production.

It also acknowledg­es that there are cultural and social dimensions to food as well taking into considerat­ion the value of access to market supplies of food, food production and supplies to the consumers.

In this regard, food sovereignt­y is seen as autonomous rather than promoting monopolies while food security is believed to have resulted in the loss of autonomy, hence farmers and local producers no longer have a voice in their farming matters and market systems.

Food sovereignt­y calls for the mobilisati­on of small-scale producers to build spaces and confidence for participat­ion of locals and establish localised food systems, livelihood­s and ecologies.

It is in this regard that the local and the grassroot voices are the best in sustainabl­e developmen­t as well as being instrument­al in the fight against climate change impacts.

For these reasons, food sovereignt­y can be described as sufficient­ly informativ­e and transforma­tional, resulting in social justice and ecological sustainabi­lity.

It creates room for small-scale producers that have been marginalis­ed by the corporate monopoly for generation­s to articulate problems from their own experience­s.

Finally, food sovereignt­y intends to build alternativ­es to the food security discourse, with the strength to localise food systems and emphasise the role of food production as a social and cultural part of the people’s livelihood­s including fighting against climate change.

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