16 resultados para Agro-food trade

em Comissão Econômica para a América Latina e o Caribe (CEPAL)


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The region of Latin America and the Caribbean can boast a successful track record in the process of eradicating hunger: it is the only region in the world that has halved both the proportion of people who suffer from hunger (the target set in the Millennium Development Goals) and their absolute number (the target set at the World Food Summit of 1996). This publication aims to provide the region’s countries with up-todate and timely information on the status of food and nutrition security; on the role in eradicating hunger played by the different areas such as agriculture, agrifood trade and natural resources management; and on the possibility of successfully addressing the twin burden of malnutrition, in a context where the effects of climate change could threaten the progress achieved in Latin America and the Caribbean thus far. The CELAC Plan for Food and Nutrition Security and the Eradication of Hunger 2025 is a cross-cutting tool for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; and it thus encourages the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean to redouble their efforts to identify key policy areas that will make it possible to speed up and consolidate the process of eradicating hunger and tackle the twin burden of malnutrition in the region, in which overweight and obesity are increasingly adding to that scourge.

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La región de América Latina y el Caribe ha mostrado una trayectoria exitosa en el proceso de erradicación del hambre y es la única región del mundo que redujo a la mitad tanto la proporción de personas que padecen hambre (meta establecida en los Objetivos de Desarrollo del Milenio) como el número absoluto de personas afectadas por el hambre (meta establecida en la Cumbre Mundial sobre la Alimentación, de 1996). El propósito de esta publicación es suministrar a los países de la región información actualizada y oportuna sobre el estado de la seguridad alimentaria y nutricional, el papel que tienen distintas áreas como la agricultura, el comercio agroalimentario y la gestión de recursos naturales en la erradicación del hambre y la posibilidad de enfrentar con éxito la doble carga de la malnutrición, en un contexto en que los efectos del cambio climático pueden amenazar los avances observados hasta el momento en América Latina y el Caribe. El Plan para la Seguridad Alimentaria, Nutrición y Erradicación del Hambre de la CELAC 2025 es una herramienta trascendental para el logro de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible de la Agenda 2030 para el Desarrollo Sostenible y, por ello, alienta a los países de América Latina y el Caribe a redoblar los esfuerzos para identificar las áreas clave de política que permitan acelerar y consolidar el proceso de erradicación del hambre y hacer frente a la doble carga de la malnutrición en la región, donde el sobrepeso y la obesidad se suman cada vez más a ese flagelo.

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Introduction There is a renewed call for a new approach to development with emphasis on community empowerment or participation, with the belief that more sustainable activities will be undertaken in those communities. Much of that call, however, is coming not from within the communities, but primarily from advocates of change who may have little to do with those communities. What then will the new approach bring apart from a change in who are the decision-makers? And how do we ensure that the change that is called for will, in fact, bring added benefits to the communities themselves? To be sure, there are some successful stories of a community approach to problem solving. However, there are also many more stories of project failures. Serious analytical work, therefore, needs to be done to determine the factors that promote a successful community-based approach; when this approach should be used; and the methodology that should be employed. In an attempt to determine these factors, a brief analysis will be made of some of the governing structures in the subregion and their possible impact on the proposed new approach. Some of the earlier efforts at stakeholder and community approach to projects will also be examined as well as the new development strategy that is prompting the call for this new paradigm. The new paradigm focuses to a large extent on decision-making and community empowerment. With few exceptions, it is short on the promotion of tangible activities that are based on the resource inventory of the communities. This is not surprising, since, as noted before, the advocates of community empowerment may have very little connection with the communities and, in most cases, are unfamiliar with the resource base. Hence, a theoretical case is made, suggesting more style than substance. Another obvious shortcoming of this new paradigm is its continued over- dependence on assistance from the outside to build communities. Externally funded projects, seminars and meetings outside of the communities and foreign technical assistance continue to dominate these projects. While, of course, all communities have basic common needs such as water, health, education and electricity, there is sufficient diversity within communities to allow for tailoring of activities and programmes such that their differences become assets. It is in that context, that agro-tourism activities, standards, agricultural diversification, food and nutrition and priority setting have been chosen as aspects and activities for promoting community development, drawing on the various strengths of communities, rural or urban.

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Incluye Bibliografía

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Includes bibliography

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Includes bibliography

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Sanitary and phytosanitary matters have acquired greater significance in the region's trade, as reflected in the significant number of complaints brought before the various dispute settlement mechanisms pertaining to the regional integration schemes. This may be attributed to the importance of the Latin American countries in world agricultural trade and to different phytosanitary and zoosanitary standards required by each. Given the multiplication of bilateral and plurilateral agreements in Latin America and the Caribbean, convergence on the sanitary standards required under such accords is crucial for the trade integration of a region that is an agro-exporter par excellence. Convergence is essential to facilitate market access and expedite trade flows. This bulletin assesses convergence of standards in the bilateral and plurilateral trade agreements signed by the countries of the region, the treatment afforded to the principles contained in the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS Agreement) and the progress the region has made relative to that Agreement.