GUIDELINE 1: DEMOCRACY, GOOD
GOVERNANCE, HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE RULE OF LAW
1.1 States should promote and safeguard a free, democratic
and just society in order to provide a peaceful, stable and enabling economic,
social, political and cultural environment in which individuals can feed
themselves and their families in freedom and dignity.
1.2 States should promote democracy, the rule of law,
sustainable development and good governance, and promote and protect human
rights and fundamental freedoms in order to empower individuals and civil
society to make demands on their governments, devise policies that address
their specific needs and ensure the accountability and transparency of
governments and state decision-making processes in implementing such policies.
States should, in particular, promote freedom of opinion and expression,
freedom of information, freedom of the press and freedom of assembly and
association, which enhances the progressive realization of the right to
adequate food in the context of national food security. Food should not be used
as a tool for political and economic pressure.
1.3 States should also promote good governance as an
essential factor for sustained economic growth, sustainable development,
poverty and hunger eradication and for the realization of all human rights
including the progressive realization of the right to adequate food.
1.4 States
should ensure, in accordance with their international human rights obligations,
that all individuals, including human rights defenders of the progressive
realization of the right to adequate food, are accorded equal protection under
the law and that due process is guaranteed in all legal proceedings.
1.5 Where appropriate and consistent with domestic law,
States may assist individuals and groups of individuals to have access to legal
assistance to better assert the progressive realization of the right to
adequate food.
GUIDELINE 2: ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT POLICIES
2.1 In order to achieve the progressive realization of the right to adequate food in the
context of national food security, States should promote broad-based economic
development that is supportive of their food security policies. States
should establish policy goals and benchmarks based on the food security needs
of their population.
2.2 States
should assess, in consultation with key stakeholders, the economic and social
situation, including the degree of food insecurity and its causes, the
nutrition situation and food safety.
2.3 States
should promote adequate and stable supplies of safe food through a combination
of domestic production, trade, storage and distribution.
2.4 States should consider adopting a holistic and
comprehensive approach to hunger and poverty reduction. Such an approach
entails, inter alia, direct and immediate measures to ensure access to
adequate food as part of a social safety net; investment in productive
activities and projects to improve the livelihoods of the poor and hungry in a
sustainable manner; the development of appropriate institutions, functioning
markets, a conducive legal and regulatory framework; and access to employment,
productive resources and appropriate services.
2.5 States should pursue inclusive, non-discriminatory and
sound economic, agriculture, fisheries, forestry, land use, and, as
appropriate, land reform policies, all of
which will permit farmers, fishers, foresters and other food producers,
particularly women, to earn a fair return from their labour, capital and
management, and encourage conservation and sustainable management of natural
resources, including in marginal areas.
2.6 Where
poverty and hunger are predominantly rural, States should focus on sustainable
agricultural and rural development through measures to improve access to land,
water, appropriate and affordable technologies, productive and financial
resources, enhance the productivity of poor rural communities, promote the
participation of the poor in economic policy decisions, share the benefits of
productivity gains, conserve and protect natural resources, and invest in rural
infrastructure, education and research. In particular, States should adopt policies
that create conditions that encourage stable employment, especially in rural
areas, including off-farm jobs.
2.7 In response to the growing problem of urban hunger and
poverty, States should promote investments aimed at enhancing the livelihoods of
the urban poor.
GUIDELINE 3: STRATEGIES
3.1 States, as appropriate and in consultation with relevant
stakeholders and pursuant to their national laws, should consider adopting a
national human-rights based strategy for the progressive realization of the
right to adequate food in the context of national food security as part of an
overarching national development strategy, including poverty reduction
strategies, where they exist.
3.2 The elaboration of these strategies should begin with a
careful assessment of existing national legislation, policy and administrative
measures, current programmes, systematic identification of existing constraints
and availability of existing resources. States should formulate the measures
necessary to remedy any weakness, and propose an agenda for change and the
means for its implementation and evaluation.
3.3 These strategies could include objectives, targets,
benchmarks and time frames; and actions to formulate policies, identify and
mobilize resources, define institutional mechanisms, allocate responsibilities,
coordinate the activities of different actors, and provide for monitoring
mechanisms. As appropriate, such strategies could address all aspects of the
food system, including the production, processing, distribution, marketing and
consumption of safe food. It could also address access to resources and to
markets as well as parallel measures in other fields. These strategies should,
in particular, address the needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups, as
well as special situations such as natural disasters and emergencies.
3.4 Where necessary, States should consider adopting and, as
appropriate, reviewing a national poverty reduction strategy that specifically
addresses access to adequate food.
3.5 States, individually or in cooperation with relevant
international organizations, should consider integrating into their poverty
reduction strategy a human rights perspective based on the principle of
non-discrimination. In raising the standard of living of those below the
poverty line, due regard should be given
to the need to ensure equality in practice to those who are traditionally
disadvantaged and between women and men.
3.6 In their poverty reduction strategies, States should also
give priority to providing basic services for the poorest, and investing in
human resources by ensuring access to primary education for all, basic health
care, capacity building in good practices, clean drinking water, adequate
sanitation and justice and by supporting programmes in basic literacy, numeracy
and good hygiene practices.
3.7 States are encouraged, inter alia and
in a sustainable manner, to increase productivity and to revitalize the
agricultural sector including livestock, forestry and fisheries through special
policies and strategies targeted at small-scale and traditional fishers, and
farmers in rural areas, and the creation of enabling conditions for private
sector participation, with emphasis on human capacity development and the
removal of constraints to agricultural production, marketing and distribution.
3.8 In developing these strategies, States are encouraged to
consult with civil society organizations and other key stakeholders at national
and regional levels, including small-scale and traditional farmers, private sector,
women, and youth associations, with the aim of promoting their active
participation in all aspects of agricultural and food production strategies.
3.9 These strategies should be transparent, inclusive and
comprehensive, cut across national policies, programmes and projects, take into
account the special needs of girls and women, combine short-term and long-term
objectives, and be prepared and implemented in a participatory and accountable
manner.
States should support, including through
regional cooperation, the implementation of national strategies for development,
in particular for the reduction of poverty and hunger as
well as for the progressive realization of the right to
adequate food.
GUIDELINE 4: MARKET SYSTEMS
4.1 States should, in accordance with their national law and
priorities, as well as their
international commitments, improve the functioning of their markets, in
particular their agricultural and food markets, in order to promote both
economic growth and sustainable development, inter alia, by mobilizing
domestic savings, both
public and private, by developing appropriate credit
policies, by generating sustainable adequate levels of national productive
investment through credits in concessional terms and by increasing human
capacity.
4.2 States should put legislation, policies, procedures and
regulatory and other institutions in place to ensure non-discriminatory access
to markets and to prevent uncompetitive
practices in markets.
4.3 States should encourage the development of corporate
social responsibility and the commitment of all market players and civil
society towards the progressive realization of the right of individuals to
adequate food in the context of national food security.
4.4 States
should provide adequate protection to consumers against fraudulent market
practices, misinformation and unsafe food. The measures toward this objective
should not constitute unjustified barriers to international trade and should be
in conformity with the WTO agreements.
4.5 States should, as appropriate, promote the development of
small-scale local and regional markets and border trade to reduce poverty and
increase food security, particularly in poor rural and urban areas.
4.6 States may wish to adopt measures to ensure that the
widest number of individuals and communities, especially disadvantaged groups,
can benefit from opportunities created by competitive agricultural trade.
4.7 States should strive to ensure that food, agricultural
trade and overall trade policies are conducive to fostering food security for
all through a non-discriminatory and market-oriented local, regional, national
and world trade system.
4.8 States should endeavour to establish well functioning
internal marketing, storage, transportation, communication and distribution
systems, inter alia, to
facilitate diversified trade and better links within and between domestic,
regional and world markets, as well as to take
advantage of new market opportunities.
4.9 States
will take into account that markets do not automatically result in everybody
achieving a sufficient income at all times to meet basic needs, and should
therefore seek to provide adequate social safety nets and, where appropriate,
the assistance of the international community for this purpose.
4.10 States
should take into account the shortcomings of market mechanisms in protecting
the environment and public goods.
GUIDELINE 5: INSTITUTIONS
5.1 States,
where appropriate, should assess the mandate and performance of relevant public
institutions and, where necessary, establish, reform or improve their
organization and structure to contribute to the progressive realization of the
right to adequate food in the context of national food security.
5.2 To
this end, States may wish to ensure the coordinated efforts of relevant
government ministries, agencies and offices. They could establish national
intersectoral coordination mechanisms to ensure the concerted implementation,
monitoring and evaluation of policies, plans and programmes. States are
encouraged to involve relevant communities in all aspects of planning and
execution of activities in these areas.
5.3 States
may also wish to entrust a specific institution with overall
responsibility for overseeing and coordinating the application of these
guidelines, bearing in mind the Declaration and Programme of Action of the 1993
Vienna World Conference on Human Rights and taking due account of existing
agriculture conventions and protocols. In order to ensure transparency and
accountability, the functions and tasks of this institution would need to be
clearly defined, regularly reviewed and provision made for adequate monitoring
mechanisms.
5.4 States
should ensure that relevant institutions provide for full and transparent
participation of the private sector and of civil society, in particular
representatives of the groups most affected by food insecurity.
5.5 States
should take measures, where and if necessary, to develop, strengthen, implement
and maintain effective anticorruption legislation and policies, including in
the food sector and in the management of emergency food aid.
GUIDELINE 7: LEGAL FRAMEWORK
7.1 States
are invited to consider, in accordance with their
domestic legal and policy frameworks, whether to
include provisions in their domestic law, possibly
including constitutional or legislative review that facilitates the progressive
realization of the right to adequate food in the context of national food
security.
7.2 States are invited to consider, in accordance with
their domestic legal and policy frameworks, whether to include provisions in their domestic law, which may
include their constitutions, bills of rights or legislation, to directly
implement the progressive realization of the right to adequate food.
Administrative, quasi-judicial and judicial mechanisms to provide
adequate, effective and prompt remedies accessible,
in particular, to members of vulnerable groups may be envisaged.
7.3 States
that have established a right to adequate food under their legal system should
inform the general public of all available rights and remedies to which they
are entitled.
7.4 States
should consider strengthening their domestic law and policies to accord access
by women heads of households to poverty reduction and nutrition security programmes
and projects.
GUIDELINE 8: ACCESS TO
RESOURCES AND ASSETS
8.1 States
should facilitate sustainable, non-discriminatory and secure access and
utilization of resources consistent with their national law and with
international law and protect the assets that are important for people’s
livelihoods. States should respect and protect the rights of individuals with
respect to resources such as land, water, forests, fisheries and livestock
without any discrimination. Where necessary and appropriate, States should
carry out land reforms and other policy reforms consistent with their human rights
obligations and in accordance with the rule of law in order to secure efficient
and equitable access to land and to strengthen pro-poor growth. Special
attention may be given to groups such as pastoralists and indigenous people and
their relation to natural resources.
8.2 States
should take steps so that members of vulnerable groups can have access to
opportunities and economic resources in order to participate fully and equally
in the economy.
8.3 States
should pay particular attention to the specific access problems of women and of
vulnerable, marginalized and traditionally disadvantaged groups, including all
persons affected by HIV/AIDS. States should take measures to protect all people
affected by HIV/AIDS from losing their access to resources and assets.
8.4 States
should promote agricultural research and development, in particular to promote
basic food production with its positive effects on basic incomes and its
benefits to small and women farmers, as well as poor consumers.
8.5 States
should, within the framework of relevant international agreements, including
those on intellectual property, promote access by medium and small-scale
farmers to research results enhancing food security.
8.6 States
should promote women’s full and equal participation in the economy and, for
this purpose, introduce, where it does not exist, and implement
gender-sensitive legislation providing women with the right to inherit and
possess land and other property. States should also provide women with secure
and equal access to, control over, and benefits from productive resources,
including credit, land, water and appropriate technologies.
8.7 States
should design and implement programmes that include different mechanisms of
access and appropriate use of agricultural land directed to the poorest
populations.
Guideline 8a: Labour
8.8 States
should take measures to encourage sustainable development in order to provide
opportunities for work that provides remuneration allowing for an adequate
standard of living for rural and urban wage earners and their families, and to
promote and protect self-employment. For States that have ratified the relevant
instruments, working conditions should be consistent with the obligations they
have assumed under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, relevant ILO Conventions and other treaties including human rights
conventions.
8.9 In
order to improve access to the labour market, States should enhance human
capital through education programmes, adult literacy and additional training programmes,
as required, regardless of race, colour, gender, language, religion, political
opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
Guideline 8b: Land
8.10 States
should take measures to promote and protect the security of land tenure,
especially with respect to women, poor and disadvantaged segments of society,
through legislation that protects the full and equal right to own land and
other property, including the right to inherit. As appropriate, States should
consider establishing legal and other policy mechanisms, consistent with their
international human rights obligations and in accordance with the rule of law,
that advance land reform to enhance access for the poor and women. Such
mechanisms should also promote conservation and sustainable use of land.
Special consideration should be given to the situation of indigenous
communities.
Guideline 8c: Water
8.11 Bearing
in mind that access to water in sufficient quantity and quality for all is
fundamental for life and health, States should strive to improve access to, and
promote sustainable use of, water resources and their allocation among users
giving due regard to efficiency and the satisfaction of basic human needs in an
equitable manner and that balances the requirement of preserving or restoring
the functioning of ecosystems with domestic, industrial and agricultural needs,
including safeguarding drinking water quality.
Guideline 8d: Genetic Resources for Food
and Agriculture
8.12 States, taking into account the
importance of biodiversity, and consistent with their obligations under
relevant international agreements, should consider specific national policies,
legal instruments and supporting mechanisms to prevent the erosion of and
ensure the conservation and sustainable use of genetic resources for food and
agriculture, including, as appropriate, for the protection of relevant
traditional knowledge and equitable participation in sharing benefits arising
from the use of these resources, and by encouraging, as appropriate, the
participation of local and indigenous communities and farmers in making
national decisions on matters related to the conservation and sustainable use
of genetic resources for food and agriculture.
Guideline 8e: Sustainability
8.13 States
should consider specific national policies, legal instruments and supporting
mechanisms to protect ecological sustainability and the carrying capacity of
ecosystems to ensure the possibility for increased, sustainable food production
for present and future generations, prevent water pollution, protect the
fertility of the soil, and promote the sustainable management of fisheries and
forestry.
Guideline 8f: Services
8.14 States
should create an enabling environment and strategies to facilitate and support
the development of private and public sector initiatives to promote appropriate
tools, technologies and mechanization in the provision of relevant services,
including research, extension, marketing, rural finance and microcredit, to
enable more efficient food production by all farmers, in particular poor
farmers, and to address local constraints such as shortage of land, water and
farm power.
GUIDELINE 9: FOOD SAFETY AND
CONSUMER PROTECTION
9.1 States
should take measures to ensure that all food, whether locally produced or
imported, freely available or sold on markets, is safe and consistent with
national food safety standards.
9.2 States
should establish comprehensive and rational food-control systems that reduce
risk of food borne disease using risk analysis and supervisory mechanisms to
ensure food safety in the entire food chain including animal feed.
9.3 States
are encouraged to take action to streamline institutional procedures for food
control and food safety at national level and eliminate gaps and overlaps in
inspection systems and in the legislative and regulatory framework for food.
States are encouraged to adopt scientifically based food safety standards,
including standards for additives, contaminants, residues of veterinary drugs
and pesticides, and microbiological hazards, and to establish standards for the
packaging, labelling and advertising of food. These standards should take into
consideration internationally accepted food standards (Codex Alimentarius) in
accordance with the WTO Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement (SPS). States
should take action to prevent contamination from industrial and other
pollutants in the production, processing, storage, transport, distribution,
handling and sale of food.
9.4 States
may wish to establish a national coordinating committee for food to bring
together both governmental and non-governmental actors involved in the food
system and to act as liaison with the FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission.
States should consider collaborating with private stakeholders in the food
system, both by assisting them in exercising controls on their own production
and handling practices, and by auditing those controls.
9.5 Where
necessary, States should assist farmers and other primary producers to follow good
agricultural practices, food processors to follow good manufacturing practices,
and food handlers to follow good hygiene practices. States are encouraged to
consider establishing food safety systems and supervisory mechanisms to ensure
the provision of safe food to consumers.
9.6 States
should ensure that education on safe practices is available for food business
operators so that their activities neither lead to harmful residues in food nor
cause harm to the environment. States should also take measures to educate
consumers about the safe storage, handling and utilization of food within the
household. States should collect and disseminate information to the public
regarding food-borne diseases and food safety matters, and should cooperate
with regional and international organizations addressing food safety issues.
9.7 States
should adopt measures to protect consumers from deception and misrepresentation
in the packaging, labelling, advertising and sale of food and facilitate
consumers’ choice by ensuring appropriate information on marketed food, and
provide recourse for any harm caused by unsafe or adulterated food, including
food offered by street sellers. Such measures should not be used as unjustified
barriers to trade; they should be in conformity with the WTO agreements (in
particular SPS and TBT).
9.8 Developed
countries are encouraged to provide technical assistance to developing
countries through advice, credits, donations and grants for capacity building
and training in food safety. When possible and appropriate, developing
countries with more advanced capabilities in food safety-related areas are
encouraged to lend assistance to less advanced developing countries.
9.9 States
are encouraged to cooperate with all stakeholders, including regional and
international consumer organizations, in addressing food safety issues, and
consider their participation in national and international fora where policies
with impact on food production, processing, distribution, storage and marketing
are discussed.
GUIDELINE 10: NUTRITION
10.1 If necessary,
States should take measures to maintain, adapt or strengthen dietary diversity
and healthy eating habits and food preparation, as well as feeding patterns,
including breastfeeding, while ensuring that changes in availability and access
to food supply do not negatively affect dietary composition and intake.
10.2 States
are encouraged to take steps, in particular through education, information and
labelling regulations, to prevent overconsumption and unbalanced diets that may
lead to malnutrition, obesity and degenerative diseases.
10.3 States
are encouraged to involve all relevant stakeholders, in particular communities
and local government, in the design, implementation, management, monitoring and
evaluation of programmes to increase the production and consumption of healthy
and nutritious foods, especially those that are rich in micronutrients. States
may wish to promote gardens both at home and at school as a key element in
combating micronutrient deficiencies and promoting healthy eating. States may
also consider adopting regulations for fortifying foods to prevent and cure
micronutrient deficiencies, in particular of iodine, iron and Vitamin A.
10.4 States
should address the specific food and nutritional needs of people living with
HIV/AIDS or suffering from other epidemics.
10.5 States
should take appropriate measures to promote and encourage breastfeeding, in
line with their cultures, the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk
Substitutes and subsequent resolutions of the World Health Assembly, in
accordance with the WHO/UNICEF recommendations.
10.6 States
may wish to disseminate information on the feeding of infants and young
children that is consistent and in line with current scientific knowledge and
internationally accepted practices and to take steps to counteract
misinformation on infant feeding. States should consider with utmost care
issues regarding breastfeeding and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
on the basis of the most up-to-date, authoritative scientific advice and
referring to the latest WHO/UNICEF guidelines.
10.7 States
are invited to take parallel action in the areas of health, education and
sanitary infrastructure and promote intersectoral collaboration, so that necessary
services and goods become available to people to enable them to make full use
of the dietary value in the food they eat and thus achieve nutritional
well-being.
10.8 States
should adopt measures to eradicate any kind of discriminatory practices, especially
with respect to gender, in order to achieve adequate levels of nutrition within
the household.
10.9 States
should recognize that food is a vital part of an individual’s culture, and they
are encouraged to take into account individuals’ practices, customs and
traditions on matters related to food.
10.10 States
are reminded of the cultural values of dietary and eating habits in different
cultures and should establish methods for promoting food safety, positive
nutritional intake including fair distribution of food within communities and
households with special emphasis on the needs and rights of both girls and boys,
as well as pregnant women and lactating mothers, in all cultures.
GUIDELINE 11: EDUCATION AND
AWARENESS RAISING
11.1 States
should support investment in human resource development such as health,
education, literacy and other skills training, which are essential to
sustainable development, including agriculture, fisheries, forestry and rural
development.
11.2 States
should strengthen and broaden primary education opportunities, especially for
girls, women and other under-served populations.
11.3 States
should encourage agricultural and environmental education at the primary and
secondary levels in order to create a better awareness in new generations about
the importance of conserving and making sustainable use of natural resources.
11.4 States
should support higher education by strengthening developing country university
and technical faculties of agriculture related disciplines and business to
carry out both education and research functions, and by engaging universities
throughout the world in training developing country agriculturalists,
scientists and businessmen at the graduate and post-graduate levels.
11.5 States
should provide information to individuals to strengthen their ability to
participate in food related policy decisions that may affect them, and to
challenge decisions that threaten their rights.
11.6 States
should implement measures to make people improve their housing conditions and
their means for food preparation, because they are related to food safety. Such
measures should be made in the educative and infrastructure fields, especially
in rural households.
11.7 States
should promote and/or integrate, into school curricula, human rights education,
including civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, which
includes the progressive realization of the right to
adequate food.
11.8 States
are encouraged to promote awareness of the importance
of human rights, including the progressive realization
of the right to adequate food.
11.9 States
should provide proper training to officials responsible
for the implementation of the progressive realization of the right to adequate
food.
11.10 States
should raise public awareness of these guidelines and continously provide and
improve access to them and to relevant human rights laws and regulations,
particularly in rural and remote areas.
11.11 States
may wish to empower civil society to participate in the implementation of these
guidelines, for instance through capacity building.
GUIDELINE 12: NATIONAL
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
12.1 Regional
and local authorities are encouraged to allocate resources for anti-hunger and
food security purposes in their respective budgets.
12.2 States
should ensure transparency and accountability in the use of public resources,
particularly in the area of food security.
12.3 States
are encouraged to promote basic social programmes and expenditures, in
particular those affecting the poor and the vulnerable segments of society, and
protect them from budget reductions, while increasing the quality and
effectiveness of social expenditures. States should strive to ensure that
budget cuts do not negatively affect access to adequate food among the poorest
sections of society.
12.4 States
are encouraged to establish an enabling legal and economic environment to
promote and mobilize domestic savings and attract external resources for
productive investment, and seek innovative sources of funding, both public and
private at national and international levels, for social programmes.
12.5 States are invited to take appropriate steps and suggest
strategies to contribute to raise awareness of the families of migrants in
order to promote efficient use of the remittances of migrants for investments
that could improve their livelihoods, including the food security of their
families.
GUIDELINE 13: SUPPORT FOR
VULNERABLE GROUPS
13.1 Consistent
with the World Food Summit commitment, States should establish Food Insecurity
and Vulnerability Information and Mapping Systems (FIVIMS), in order to
identify groups and households particularly vulnerable to food insecurity along
with the reasons for their food insecurity. States should develop and identify
corrective measures to be implemented both immediately and progressively to
provide access to adequate food.
13.2 States
are invited to systematically undertake disaggregated analysis on the food
insecurity, vulnerability and nutritional status of different groups in society,
with particular attention to assessing any form of discrimination that may
manifest itself in greater food insecurity and vulnerability to food
insecurity, or in a higher prevalence of malnutrition among specific population
groups, or both, with a view to removing and preventing such causes of food
insecurity or malnutrition.
13.3 States
should establish transparent, non-discriminatory eligibility criteria in order
to ensure effective targeting of assistance, so that no one who is in need is
excluded, or that those not in need of assistance are included. Effective
accountability and administrative systems are essential to prevent leakages and
corruption. Factors to take into account include household and individual
assets and income, nutrition and health status, as well as existing coping
mechanisms.
13.4 States
may wish to give priority to channelling food assistance via women as a means
of enhancing their decision-making role and ensuring that the food is used to
meet the household’s food requirements.
GUIDELINE 14: SAFETY NETS
14.1 States
should consider, to the extent that resources permit, establishing and
maintaining social safety and food safety nets to protect those who are unable
to provide for themselves. As far as possible, and with due regard to
effectiveness and coverage, States should consider building on existing
capacities within communities at risk to provide the necessary resources for
social safety and food safety nets to fulfil the progressive realization of the
right to adequate food. States may wish to consider the benefits of procuring
locally.
14.2 States
and international organizations should consider the benefits of local
procurement for food assistance that could integrate the nutritional needs of
those affected by food insecurity and the commercial interests of local
producers.
14.3 Although
the design of social and food safety nets will depend on the nature of food
insecurity, objectives, budget, existing administrative capacity and local
circumstances such as levels of food supply and local food markets, States
should nonetheless ensure that they adequately target those in need and respect
the principle of non-discrimination in the establishment of eligibility
criteria.
14.4 States
should take steps, to the extent that resources permit, so that any measure of
an economic or financial nature, likely to have a negative impact on existing
levels of food consumption of vulnerable groups be accompanied by provision for
effective food safety nets. Safety nets should be linked to other complementary
interventions that promote food security in the longer term.>
14.5 In
situations where it has been determined that food plays an appropriate role in
safety nets, food assistance should bridge the gap between the nutritional
needs of the affected population and their ability to meet those needs
themselves. Food assistance should be provided with the fullest possible
participation of those affected, and such food should be nutritionally adequate
and safe, bearing in mind local circumstances, dietary traditions and cultures.
14.6 States
should consider accompanying food assistance in safety net schemes with
complementary activities to maximize benefits towards ensuring people’s access
to and utilization of adequate food. Essential complementary activities include
access to clean water and sanitation, health care interventions and nutrition
education activities.
14.7 States,
in the design of safety nets, should consider the important role of
international organizations such as FAO, IFAD and WFP, and other relevant
international, regional and civil society organizations that can assist them in
fighting rural poverty and promoting food security and agricultural
development.
GUIDELINE 15: INTERNATIONAL
FOOD AID
15.1 Donor
States should ensure that their food aid policies support national efforts by
recipient States to achieve food security, and base their food aid provisions
on sound needs assessment, targeting especially food insecure and vulnerable
groups. In this context, donor States should provide assistance in a manner
that takes into account food safety, the importance of not disrupting local
food production and the nutritional and dietary needs and culture of recipient
populations. Food aid should be provided with a clear exit strategy and avoid
the creation of dependency. Donors should promote increased use of local and
regional commercial markets to meet food needs in famine-prone countries and
reduce dependence on food aid.
15.2 International food-aid
transactions, including bilateral food aid that is monetized, should be carried
out in a manner consistent with the FAO Principles of Surplus Disposal and
Consultative Obligations, the Food Aid Convention and the WTO Agreement on
Agriculture, and should meet the internationally agreed food safety standards,
bearing in mind local circumstances, dietary traditions and cultures.
15.3 States
and relevant non-state actors should ensure, in accordance with international
law, safe and unimpeded access to the populations in need, as well as for
international needs assessments, and by humanitarian agencies involved in the
distribution of international food assistance.
15.4 The
provision of international food aid in emergency situations should take
particular account of longer term rehabilitation and development objectives in
the recipient countries, and should respect universally recognized humanitarian
principles.
15.5 The
assessment of needs and the planning, monitoring and evaluation of the
provision of food aid should, as far as possible, be made in a participatory
manner, and whenever possible, in close collaboration with recipient
governments at the national and local level.
GUIDELINE 16: NATURAL
AND HUMAN-MADE DISASTERS
16.1 Food
should never be used as a means of political and economic pressure.
16.2 States
reaffirm the obligations they have assumed under international humanitarian law
and, in particular, as parties to the 1949 Geneva Conventions and/or the 1977
Additional Protocols thereto with respect to the humanitarian needs of the
civilian population, including their access to food in situations of armed
conflict and occupation, inter alia,
-Additional
Protocol I provides, inter alia, that “[t]he starvation of civilians as
a method of warfare is prohibited” and that “[i]t is prohibited to attack,
destroy, remove or render useless objects indispensable to the survival of the
civilian population, such as foodstuffs, agricultural areas for the production
of foodstuffs, crops, livestock, drinking water installations and supplies and
irrigation works, for the specific purpose of denying them, for their
sustenance value to the civilian population or to the adverse party, whatever
the motive, whether in order to starve out civilians, to cause them to move
away, or for any other motive”, and that “these objects shall not be made the
object of reprisals”.
16.3 In
situations of occupation, international humanitarian law provides, inter
alia: that to the fullest extent of the means available to it, the
Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the
population; that it should, in particular, bring in the necessary foodstuffs,
medical stores and other articles if the resources of the Occupied Territory
are inadequate; and that if the whole or part of the population of an Occupied
Territory is inadequately supplied, the Occupying Power shall agree to relief
schemes on behalf of the said population, and shall facilitate them by all the
means at its disposal.[1]
16.4 States
reaffirm the obligations they have assumed regarding the protection, safety and
security of humanitarian personnel.
16.5 States
should make every effort to ensure that refugees and internally displaced
persons have access at all times to adequate food. In this respect, States and
other relevant stakeholders should be encouraged to make use of the Guiding
Principles on Internal Displacement when dealing with situations of internal
displacement.
16.6 In
the case of natural or human-made disasters, States should provide food
assistance to those in need, may request international assistance if their own
resources do not suffice, and should facilitate safe and unimpeded access for
international assistance in accordance with international law and universally recognized
humanitarian principles, bearing in mind local circumstances, dietary
traditions and cultures.
16.7 States
should put in place adequate and functioning mechanisms of early warning to
prevent or mitigate the effects of natural or human-made disasters. Early
warning systems should be based on international standards and cooperation, on
reliable, disaggregated data and should be constantly monitored. States should
take appropriate emergency preparedness measures, such as keeping food stocks
for the acquisition of food and take steps to put in place adequate systems for
distribution.
16.8 States
are invited to consider establishing mechanisms to assess nutritional impact
and to gain understanding of the coping strategies of affected households in
the event of natural or human made disasters. This should inform the targeting,
design, implementation and evaluation of relief, rehabilitation and resilience
building programmes.
GUIDELINE 17: MONITORING,
INDICATORS AND BENCHMARKS
17.1 States
may wish to establish mechanisms to monitor and evaluate the implementation of
these Guidelines towards the progressive realization of the right to adequate
food in the context of national food security, in accordance with their
capacity and by building on existing information systems and addressing information
gaps.
17.2 States
may wish to consider conducting “Right to Food Impact Assessments” in order to
identify the impact of domestic policies, programmes and projects on the
progressive realization of the right to adequate food of the population at large
and vulnerable groups in particular, and as a basis for the adoption of the
necessary corrective measures.
17.3 States
may also wish to develop a set of process, impact and outcome indicators,
relying on indicators already in use and monitoring systems such as FIVIMS, so
as to assess the implementation of the progressive realization of the right to
adequate food. They may wish to establish appropriate benchmarks to be achieved
in the short, medium and long term, which relate directly to meeting poverty and
hunger reduction targets as a minimum, as well as other national and
international goals including those adopted at the World Food Summit and the
Millennium Summit.
17.4 In
this evaluation process, process indicators could be so identified or designed that
they explicitly relate and reflect the use of specific policy instruments and
interventions with outcomes consistent with the progressive realization of the
right to adequate food in the context of national food security. Such
indicators could enable States to implement legal, policy and administrative
measures, detect discriminatory practices and outcomes, and ascertain the
extent of political and social participation in the process of realizing that
right.
17.5 States
should, in particular, monitor the food-security situation of vulnerable
groups, especially women, children and the elderly, and their nutritional
status, including the prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies.
17.6 In
this evaluation process, States should ensure a participatory approach to
information gathering, management, analysis, interpretation and dissemination.
[1]
1949 Geneva Convention IV Relative to the Protection of Civilians Persons in
Time of War, Articles 55, 59