Skip to content
  • EN
  • FR
  • ES
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Donate
Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
La Via Campesina – EN
  • TopicsExpand
    • Land, Water and Territories
    • Agroecology, Biodiversity and Peasants’ Seeds
    • Trade Markets and Income
    • Public Policies
    • Peasants’ Rights
    • Climate and Environmental Justice
    • Migrants and Waged Workers
    • Transnational Companies and Agribusiness
  • ArticulationsExpand
    • Youth Articulation
    • Women’s Articulation
    • Diversities
  • Publications
  • MultimediaExpand
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • CampaignsExpand
    • Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform
    • Global Campaign for Peasant Seeds
    • Campaign to Stop Violence against Women
    • Campaign against Agrotoxics
    • Campaign for a Binding Treaty
search
  • EN
  • FR
  • ES
search
La Via Campesina – EN
Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
Food Systems for People | Transnational Companies and Agribusiness

UN Food Systems Summit: Social Movements call for True Food Systems Change

24 July 202323 May 2024

ROME, ITALY—As the United Nations Food Systems Summit stocktaking event begins today, the largest global food justice movements, small-scale food producer organizations, and Indigenous Peoples, representing millions of people across the world, have released a new statement denouncing the United Nations’ controversial approach to tackling hunger and malnutrition.

To overcome the global food crisis, we need real food systems change for people and the planet

In a press conference on 17 July, representatives from the People’s Autonomous Response to the UN Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) highlighted the urgent, coordinated actions that are needed to overcome the global hunger crises, and respond to the rights and demands of those most affected by the hunger, climate and health crises.

“The UN Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) has not only overlooked our rights and the structural causes of the crises..the intention of the Summit organizers is to sell us the corporate and industrial project as transformation.”

Saúl Vicente from the International Indian Treaty Council

The movements and organizations opposing the Summit call for an urgent shift away from corporate-driven industrial models and towards biodiverse, agroecological, community-led food systems that prioritize the public interest over profit-making.

The rights of peoples to access and control land and productive resources must be guaranteed, and agroecological production models and peasant seeds promoted.”

Ibrahima Coulibaly, President of the Network of West African Farmers and Agricultural Producers’ Organizations (ROPPA)

Two years ago, the UN Summit sparked an unprecedented global countermobilization. The main concern of the Summit’s critics was – and remains – the escalating influence of corporations and their proxy organizations within the United Nations. 

“Don’t appoint the goat as gardener, a peasant proverb says… The corporate ag, food, and data giants don’t care about democratic governance in the UN – they just use it for their profits. Like the goat, corporations will eat the salad and the roses, if you don’t stop them”.

Patti Naylor from the National Family Farm Coalition

Real food systems change for people and the planet is urgently needed and possible, but with the current hunger figures, the UN will not meet their Sustainable Development Goal of zero hunger by 2030. This ongoing and systemic crisis is a product of policy failures and omissions, and a result of pursuing a problematic path that leads to the exacerbation of inequalities and dependencies, destruction of environments and biodiversity, and spillover effects aggravating the global debt and climate crises. 

“Over the past two decades, people from all over the world have presented concrete, effective strategies for addressing the climate and food crises based on respect for social and racial diversity, justice, and human and collective rights. Foremost among these are food sovereignty, agroecology, revitalisation of biodiversity, territorial markets and a solidarity-based economy,” says Shalmali Guttal, from Focus on the Global South. “The evidence is overwhelming – the solutions devised by small-scale food producers and Indigenous Peoples not only feed the world but also advance gender, social, economic justice, youth empowerment, workers’ rights and real resilience to crises. Why are policy makers not listening to them and providing them with adequate support?”

A new FIAN report released in parallel to the statement, “Food Systems Transformation – In which direction?”, calls for an urgent overhaul of the global food governance architecture to guarantee decision-making that prioritizes the public good and the right to food for all.

The communities in the front lines of the food crisis are being used by corporations as an alibi to increase profits. The tragedy is that policy makers at the food system summit are ignoring social movements’ far more effective ideas about how to end hunger.”Raj Patel

“In these times of growing hunger and multiple crises, it is more urgent than ever that governments and the UN listen to us” says ….We call on you: change direction, and support our demands and efforts for a food sovereign future based on human rights and the principles of agroecology, care, justice, diversity, solidarity and  accountability.”

Perla Álvarez from La Vía Campesina

Read the Autonomous People’s Response to the UN Food Systems Summit+2

About the People’s Autonomous Response to the UN Food Systems SummitThe People’s Autonomous Response to the UN Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) was initiated by and is anchored in the Civil Society and Indigenous Peoples’ Mechanism (CSIPM) for relations with the UN Committee on World Food Security (CFS). The CSIPM is the world’s largest platform of civil society and Indigenous Peoples’ organizations working on the right to food, food sovereignty and food security and nutrition. The participating organizations of the CSIPM have more than 380 million affiliated members. The People’s Autonomous Response garnered support beyond the Mechanism, with several hundred national, regional and global organizations supporting its declarations and actions.

This post is also available in Español and Français.

RELATED NEWS:

  1. We fight for food sovereignty, for agroecological peasant agriculture: La Via Campesina’s Position on the COP 16 of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity
  2. Depth of Field: Films Showcasing Food Systems that Benefit the People and the Land | Canada
  3. Sri Lanka: Social Movements Allege Large-Scale Land Diversion from Nature Reserve for Industrial Aquaculture Project
Post Tags: #UNFSS2021

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Tunisia and the EU must uphold the rights and dignity of migrants
NextContinue
With the Land: Reflections on Land Work and 10 years of the Land Workers’ Alliance
SUPPORT THE PEASANT MOVEMENT

LATEST NEWS FROM ARTICULATIONS

  • Kenyan Peasants League: GMOs and Hybrid Seeds Trap Peasant Women in a Cycle of Debt and Depression9 May 2025
  • La Via Campesina’s Diversity Articulation Meets in Thailand | A Short Report28 April 2025

LATEST STATEMENTS & PRESS RELEASES

  • Peasants Belong on Farms, Not in Prisons. Release South Korean Peasant Leader Hyun Jin-hee Immediately!29 April 2025
  • Food sovereignty is not possible without financial sovereignty, warn small-scale food producers and grassroots organisations21 April 2025
  • From Carajás to Gaza: Peasant Struggles Are Global — To Defend Land, Water, and Territories for Life!17 April 2025
Organizations
Countries
Peasants
Regions

GET INVOLVED

Donate to La Via Campesina
Subscribe to Our Newsletter

LVC POLICY ADVOCACY

  • FAO – CFS
  • Seed Treaty (ITPGRFA)
  • UN Decade of Family Farming
  • Food Systems for People
  • UN Human Rights Council

LVC Missions

  • Palestine Solidarity
  • Haiti Mission
  • Colombia Peace Process
  • Peasant Alerts
  • Global Solidarity Statements

Social networks

Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • LVC Schools
  • Regions and Members
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Search
  • Contact us
Scroll to top
  • Topics
    • Land, Water and Territories
    • Agroecology, Biodiversity and Peasants’ Seeds
    • Trade Markets and Income
    • Public Policies
    • Peasants’ Rights
    • Climate and Environmental Justice
    • Migrants and Waged Workers
    • Transnational Companies and Agribusiness
  • Articulations
    • Youth Articulation
    • Women’s Articulation
    • Diversities
  • Publications
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • Campaigns
    • Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform
    • Global Campaign for Peasant Seeds
    • Campaign to Stop Violence against Women
    • Campaign against Agrotoxics
    • Campaign for a Binding Treaty