|
|
THE HISTORY OF FARMERS'
RIGHTS IN THE FAO:
CBD and Agenda 21
on Farmers' Rights and the response of the FAO
The
issue of Farmers' Rights was addressed during the negotiations leading to the
Convention on Biological Diversity as well as in the Agenda 21, both adopted in
1992. These were important points of reference for later negotiations towards
the International Treaty.
The Convention on Biological Diversity
(CBD) was the first legally binding international treaty to address the
conservation, sustainable use and equitable sharing of benefits derived from
the utilization of biological diversity in general. It covers domesticated as
well as undomesticated biodiversity. Until the International Treaty on Plant
Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture was adopted in 2001, it was the only
legally binding international agreement pertaining to the management of crop
genetic resources. The International Undertaking was not legally
binding).
The CBD entails provisions which have
similarities and parallels to the FAO resolutions from 1989 and the later
International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. With
Article 8(j), the Parties to the CBD agree to respect, preserve and maintain
traditional knowledge, innovation and practices, as far as possible, as
appropriate and subject to their national legislation. Reference is made to
indigenous and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for
the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity. The Parties also
agree to promote the wider application of such knowledge, innovation and
practices. There is no precise definition of the indigenous and local
communities referred to. The Parties were encouraged at the Third Meeting of
the Conference of the Parties III in 1996 to build capacity among indigenous
and local communities for the in situ management of agricultural biological
diversity (COP Decision III/11, paragraph 15f). It seems that the provisions on
traditional knowledge and indigenous and local communities under the CBD and
the provisions on Farmers' Rights, as spelled out in the agreed interpretations
of the International Undertaking and in the International Treaty, have the
potential to be mutually reinforcing. Nevertheless, the first initiative to
assess potential synergies between the two regimes in this regard was not taken
until 2002 (see section 2.8 below).
The CBD was opened for signing at the UN
Conference on Environment and Development in Rio in 1992, and entered into
force 29 December 1993. However, the text of the CBD had been adopted in
Nairobi in May 1992 in the Nairobi Final Act of the Conference for the Adoption
of the Agreed Text of the Convention on Biological Diversity. In this context,
a resolution on the interrelationship between the CBD and the promotion of
sustainable agriculture was adopted on 22 May (Resolution 3). This resolution
deals particularly with the importance of plant genetic resources for food and
agriculture, and urges that ways and means be explored to develop
complementarity and cooperation between the CBD and the Global System for the
Conservation and Sustainable Use of Plant Genetic Resources for Food and
Sustainable Agriculture (ibid, paragraph 2), which was established under FAO
and of which the International Undertaking was a central component. Finally,
the resolution recognizes the need to seek solutions to two outstanding matters
concerning plant genetic resources, one of which is 'the question of Farmers'
Rights' (ibid, paragraph 4).
United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 3-14 June 1992: Agenda
21. |
Agenda 21 was adopted at UN Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992, as a
dynamic programme, to be carried out by various actors according to the
differing situations, capacities and priorities of countries and regions
(Preamble, paragraph 1.6). Chapter 14 of Agenda 21 addresses the promotion of
sustainable agriculture and rural development. In this context, it deals with
the conservation and sustainable utilization of crop genetic resources (section
G). These resources are essential to meet future needs for food, it states; and
the primary objective for action is to safeguard the world's genetic resources
while preserving them for sustainable use. Several necessary measures towards
this end are listed, and actions to be taken by governments are indicated.
Furthermore, the appropriate UN agencies and regional organizations are
requested to take action in this regard (ibid, paragraph
14.60.a):
"Strengthen the Global System on the Conservation and
Sustainable Use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture by,
inter alia, accelerating the development of the Global Information and
Early Warning System to facilitate the exchange of information; developing ways
to promote the transfer of environmentally sound technologies, in particular to
developing countries; and taking further steps to realize Farmers'
Rights."
In other words, the CBD and the Agenda 21 call on
FAO to strengthen its work for the sustainable management of crop genetic
resources, including the realization of Farmers' Rights. No indication is given
with regard to the content of Farmers' Rights, however.
At its next session, in November 1993, the FAO
Conference accordingly requested the FAO Director-General to provide a forum
for negotiations for the adaptation of the International Undertaking in harmony
with the Convention (Resolution 7/93). The negotiations should include the
issue of realization of Farmers' Rights. The Commission on Plant Genetic
Resources followed up with a mandate and a proposed process (CPGR-Ex1/94/3:
Revisions of the International Undertaking: Mandate, context, background and
proposed process, FAO: Rome, 1994). This marked the point of departure for
the long-lasting negotiations that were to lead up to the adoption of the
International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture in
2001. Farmers' Rights was one of several hot topics during the negotiations. We
will not delve into all the different meetings and discussions that are
relevant in this context, since that would exceed the limits of this report,
and they have been analysed elsewhere. Rather, we focus on the Global Plan of
Action for the Conservation and Sustainable Utilization of Plant Genetic
Resources for Food and Agriculture and the related State of World's Plant
Genetic Resources report, which provides a good mid-term overview over the
state of the discussion.
Pages in this
sub-section:
THE
HISTORY OF FARMERS' RIGHTS IN THE FAO
The history of Farmers' Rights in
overview
First use
of Farmers' Rights
Origin of the concept in FAO
FR in the Keystone
Dialogues
Conference Resolutions on FR
CBD and Agenda 21 on
FR
Global Plan of
Action
Breakthrough of the
negotiations |
Top
 |
|
|
In this
section:
|

  |
|