www.ids.ac.uk www.oxfam.org The second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life uncovers the grassroots realities of the right to food. Most societies have shared understandings of the rights and responsibilities around protection against hunger. Customary rights and responsibilities, patchy and uneven at the best of times, are affected by rapid changes in food prices and responses to them; becoming less effective buffers against the global drivers of food insecurity. People at risk of hunger are keenly receptive to state and civil society action that strengthens their sense of right to food, but formal responsibilities for action are often unclear and monitoring systems rarely capture local reali...
Treating food as a commodity is a dominant mode of valuing food in the United States, and around ...
Thousands of people in dozens of countries took to the streets when world food prices spiked in 2008...
What is the contribution social rights can make to overcome the global food crisis? Instead of dismi...
Help Yourself! provides the second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility af...
The second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life unco...
The second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life unco...
Does more talk of the right to food and more action on food security amount to more accountability a...
The global food crisis of 2007-11 left food prices higher and more volatile than they had been for a...
Current global events validate the fact that beyond a theoretical analysis of rights discourse and f...
Despite growing activism around the right to food in the past decade, there has been little explorat...
The right to food has received increasing attention internationally and nationally following drastic...
Food insecurity is a global issue. Large parts of the global population are unable to feed themselve...
This thesis explores the rise of nationally co-ordinated or facilitated emergency food provision in ...
With only five years left until the 2015 deadline to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, food ...
The United Nations has declared food security a human right, yet people around the world still strug...
Treating food as a commodity is a dominant mode of valuing food in the United States, and around ...
Thousands of people in dozens of countries took to the streets when world food prices spiked in 2008...
What is the contribution social rights can make to overcome the global food crisis? Instead of dismi...
Help Yourself! provides the second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility af...
The second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life unco...
The second year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life unco...
Does more talk of the right to food and more action on food security amount to more accountability a...
The global food crisis of 2007-11 left food prices higher and more volatile than they had been for a...
Current global events validate the fact that beyond a theoretical analysis of rights discourse and f...
Despite growing activism around the right to food in the past decade, there has been little explorat...
The right to food has received increasing attention internationally and nationally following drastic...
Food insecurity is a global issue. Large parts of the global population are unable to feed themselve...
This thesis explores the rise of nationally co-ordinated or facilitated emergency food provision in ...
With only five years left until the 2015 deadline to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, food ...
The United Nations has declared food security a human right, yet people around the world still strug...
Treating food as a commodity is a dominant mode of valuing food in the United States, and around ...
Thousands of people in dozens of countries took to the streets when world food prices spiked in 2008...
What is the contribution social rights can make to overcome the global food crisis? Instead of dismi...