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Changing Relations of Power in Global Food and Agriculture Governance

Environmental Policy
Governance
Political Economy
S07
Gerard Breeman
Departments of Political Science and Public Administration, Universiteit Leiden
Jessica Duncan
Wageningen University and Research Center

Endorsed by the ECPR Research Network on Food Policy and Governance


Abstract

Food governance is undergoing rapid change. New governance arrangements are leading us away from a mono-disciplinary and siloed focus on agricultural, international development, environment and health towards more integrated and cross-boundary perspectives. These new assemblages present opportunities, but also challenge to the ruling governance approaches in so far as they prompt new rules of the game, changing the relations between international and global organizations, states, and local producers and receivers of food. New power arrangements are being established (and contested) between public and private actors, producers and consumers, policy makers and politicians in new combinations. Novel communication and information exchange channels are being explored, such as the use of big data to monitor and influence agricultural production and food consumption patterns. New grassroots-level organization are being set up for traditionally on the periphery of power to claim new rights and authority. The legitimacy and expectation of retail, NGOs and grassroots organizations are changing vice-versa government agencies. Furthermore, the sites where decisions are taken, and how these decisions are taken, about what is sustainable food production, healthy food patterns, and just and safe boundaries are also transforming. Given this, there is a need to evaluate existing and emerging governance arrangements and to identify innovative ways of governing agriculture and food production and consumption, including their integration (or exclusion) from other governance arenas. We welcome Panel and Paper proposal that explore and analyse new trends in agriculture and food governance. Proposed Panel titles: Big data- impacts and implications for food security actors Public Private Partnerships: trends in food and agriculture governance New approaches to multi-stakeholder governance for food and agriculture New models of governance for food and agriculture Governance from below: The power of local food actors in a globalizing world Food policy and governance in an post-2015 Development Agenda era
Code Title Details
P034 Changing Governance to Reach Global Sustainable Food Security View Panel Details
P148 Food Policy and Governance in a post 2015 Era View Panel Details
P261 New Models of Governance for Food and Agriculture View Panel Details