The Right to Food and Private Voluntary Food Standards
Keywords:
Right to food, Food standards, Human rights, Global food governance, Voluntary standards, Food safetyAbstract
The right to food is a human right stipulated in different human rights treaties. It demands availability, accessibility, sustainability and adequacy of food supplies to be realised. Private voluntary food standards govern international food chains. They define procedures and conditions under which food is produced. These standards have multiple impacts on all actors in the food chain. They may support the fulfilment of the right to food, in particular concerning food safety and other human rights, but they also might negatively affect the income of small–scale farmers. This article argues that home state governments and host state governments governed of the private standards are obliged to mitigate the negative effects on human rights. There are multiple avenues for mitigation because states have a margin of appreciation regarding the realization of the right to food and the effectiveness of different options depends on the context of the particular standard in question.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The authors who publish on this journal agree the following terms:
1. Authors guarantee that this is the first publication of the work and that it is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5 AR) which allows others to share the work recognizing the authorship and the initial publication on this journal.
2. Authors may establish additional agreements to non-exclusive distribution of the published work with a recognition of its initial publication in this journal.
3. Articles may be compiled for its publication in books or to be saved in an institutional repository, or personal web page newer than the publication in the Journal.