Litcius/Paper detail

Equity and expertise in the UN Food Systems Summit

Nicholas Nisbett, Sharon Friel, Richmond Aryeetey, Fábio da Silva Gomes, Jody Harris, Kathryn Backholer, Phillip Baker, Valarie Blue Bird Jernigan, Sirinya Phulkerd

2021BMJ Global Health36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The UN Food Systems Summit is expected to launch bold new actions, solutions and strategies to deliver progress on all 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs), each of which requires a transformation in the way the world produces, consumes and thinks about food. However, the summit preparations have started controversially, with claims of corporate capture by prominent civil society groups, who, alongside the current and two former UN Special Rapporteurs on the Right to Food,2 have also noted insufficient attention paid to human rights and to rebalancing power in the food system itself. The issue of corporate capture is an important one for the summit. Early decisions to implement a clear set of rules on corporate
\nparticipation and transparency were missed and need rectifying urgently for the summit to continue with any legitimacy, as the UN
\nSpecial Rapporteurs and the scientists of a new boycott have pointed out. The summit has embraced the (contested, some would argue failed) principle of ‘multistakeholder inclusivity’ as essential for the summit to be a ‘safe space’ for all actors, but with little regards to how power asymmetries between
\nstakeholders within the summit itself must be acknowledged, addressed and accounted for transparently; not a helpful precedent for a global architecture to address those same
\npower asymmetries.

Topics & Concepts

SummitEquity (law)LegitimacyTransparency (behavior)Political scienceSustainable developmentIntergenerational equityCivil societyScope (computer science)Human rightsPublic administrationBusinessLaw and economicsSustainabilityEconomicsLawComputer sciencePoliticsGeographyBiologyProgramming languageEcologyPhysical geographyFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsChild Nutrition and Water AccessGlobal Public Health Policies and Epidemiology