The Right to Food
From Sovereignty to Security
Kirsteen Shields(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 1. August 2018
Book
Hardback
200 pages
978-1-138-28150-9 (ISBN)
Description
In 2015 the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (UN FAO) reported that hunger remains an everyday challenge for almost 795 million people worldwide. The global crisis of food security is generally problematized as scientific in nature and in need of scientific or technological solutions. This book argues that the reforms necessary for future food security may be found not just in science but also in law.
The book premises that food insecurity derives from a key feature of international law; corporate impunity for human rights violations and most specifically corporate impunity for violations of the right to food. It analyses and critiques the inconsistent application of the legal concepts that distinguish corporations from states, principally 'citizenship', 'nationality' and 'sovereignty'. It argues that the application of these concepts to corporations serves to create an artificial accountability vacuum that deflects responsibility away from corporations and also from states who do not regulate them appropriately. The book delivers a systematic critique of the state-corporation dichotomy at the heart of international law and presents the idea of transformation or 'revolution' in international law through the right to food.
The book premises that food insecurity derives from a key feature of international law; corporate impunity for human rights violations and most specifically corporate impunity for violations of the right to food. It analyses and critiques the inconsistent application of the legal concepts that distinguish corporations from states, principally 'citizenship', 'nationality' and 'sovereignty'. It argues that the application of these concepts to corporations serves to create an artificial accountability vacuum that deflects responsibility away from corporations and also from states who do not regulate them appropriately. The book delivers a systematic critique of the state-corporation dichotomy at the heart of international law and presents the idea of transformation or 'revolution' in international law through the right to food.
More details
Series
Language
English
Publishing group
CRC Press
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 159 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-138-28150-9 (9781138281509)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Kirsteen Shields is a Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Dundee, UK.
Content
1. Introduction: The Relationship between the Right to Food, Food Security and Sovereignty Part 1: The Right to Food and Food Security: Why the right to food is not enough 2. A Genealogy of the Right to Food in International Law 3. The Growth of the Right to Food in International Law 4. Limits to Existing Legal Provisions Part 2: Case studies on conflicts of laws and food security: Who is paying for 'future food security'? 5. Case study on the appropriation and distribution of seeds 6. Case study on the appropriation and distribution of land 7. Case study on the appropriation and distribution of indigenous knowledge Part 3: Sovereignty, Democracy and Food Security: Roots of Reform 8. From Sovereignty to Security in Regional Protections 9. Increased Corporate Accountability 10. Conclusion