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Renewed
Commitment to Agrarian Reform and Rural Development
Approximately
900 million people – three quarters of
the world’s poor – live in rural
areas and depend on access to land and other
natural resources for their livelihoods. For
most of them, insecure access to land is closely
linked to poverty.
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| Photo: P.Koohafkan, Peru. |
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Since
the World Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development
in 1979, calls have repeatedly been made to help the
poor gain secure access to land and to resources such
as technology, credit, inputs and markets. Processes
of agrarian reform have been implemented in many countries:
some have succeeded, some have failed. But for millions
of poor farmers, secure land access is still far from
becoming a reality.
The
time has come for a renewed commitment to agrarian
reform and rural development, through the identification
of new challenges and options for revitalizing rural
communities. This is fundamental if we are to achieve
the goal of reducing by half the number of poor and
hungry people by 2015, as set out by the UN Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs).
The
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
(FAO) is taking the lead in increasing this renewed
international commitment by organizing in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, from 7 to 10 March 2006, the International
Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development.
The meeting will primarily serve to review different
experiences of agrarian reform around the world by
analysing impacts, processes, mechanisms and the actors
involved, in order to develop proposals for future
action.
Five
main themes will be the topic of the discussion:
- policies
and practises for securing and improving access
to land and promoting agrarian reform;
- building
local capacities to improve access to land, water,
agricultural inputs and agrarian services to
promote rural development and a sustainable management
of natural resources;
- new
opportunities to strengthen rural producers and
communities;
- agrarian
reform, social justice and sustainable development,
and
- food
sovereignty and access to resources.
For
each theme an issue paper will be prepared and discussed
through a participatory process of consultations, including
electronic conferences. The issue papers will be presented
at the ICARRD Conference.
During
the four-day Conference, representatives from governments
and civil society organizations will work on group
thematic sessions to jointly identify the main topics
that the plan for action needs to address. A round
table on “Agrarian Reform, Social Justice and
Sustainable Development” will be held contemporaneously
and several side events are also in preparation.
The
conference will come up with two concrete results:
a) a lasting Platform of understanding, learning and dialogue on Agrarian
Reform and Rural Development supported by an International Observatory
Panel, and
b) a range
of best policies and practices and lessons learned on Agrarian
Reform and rural development to promote priority actions, partnerships
and international cooperation.
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