Access Today Accounting For Hunger: The Right To Food In The Era Of Globalization (Studies In International Law) Conceptualized By Olivier De Schutter Compiled As EText

challenge of global hunger is now high on the agenda of governments and international policymakers, The contributors in this study address that challenge by looking at the obstacles which stand in the way of implementing a right to food in the era of globalization.
The right to food, the book argues, can only be realized if governance improves at the domestic level and if the international environment enables governments to adopt appropriate policies.
The Accounting for Hunger's essays demonstrate how improved accountability at the national level and reform of the international economic environment in the areas of trade, food aid, and investment go handinhand in the move towards full realization of the right to food, while reforms at domestic level are key in effectively tackling hunger, including reforms that improve accountability of government officials.
The current regimes of trade, investment, and food aid, as well as the development of biofuels production all of which contribute to define the international context in which States implement such reforms should be reshaped if these national efforts are to be successful.
The title Accounting for Hunger emphasizes the point that accountability both at domestic and international level must be improved if sustainable progress is to be achieved in combating global hunger.
The implication is that the extraterritorial human rights obligations of States beyond their national territories in their food aid, investment, or trade policies as well as the strengthening of global governance of food security as is currently being attempted with the reform of the Committee on World Food Security in Rome have a
Access Today Accounting For Hunger: The Right To Food In The Era Of Globalization (Studies In International Law) Conceptualized By Olivier De Schutter Compiled As EText
key role to fulfill.
Domestic reforms will not achieve sustainable results unless the international environment is more enabling of the efforts of governments acting individually, Series: Studies in International Law Vol,.