New York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers
Document Type
Article
Comments
13 Yale Human Rights & Development L.J. 403
Abstract
The number of hungry in the world has crossed the one billion mark, a dubious milestone that has been attributed in large part to consecutive food and economic crises. Over ninety-eight percent of these individuals live in the developing world. Ironically, a great majority are involved in food production as small-scale independent food producers or agricultural laborers. These facts and figures signal a definitive blow to efforts to reduce global hunger and lift the world’s poorest from abject and dehumanizing poverty. They also bring to light the deep imbalance of power in a fundamentally flawed food system. This Comment explores both the urgency and paucity of the “right to food” as a legal and normative framework for addressing the current food crisis. It begins with an articulation of the contours and limits of the right to food under international human rights law. It then explores how powerful states, international financial institutions, and transnational corporations affect the right to food globally. The Comment concludes by addressing particular doctrinal challenges that are essential to reclaiming the right to food as a relevant normative framework under economic globalization.
Date of Authorship for this Version
1-2011
Recommended Citation
Narula, Smita, "Reclaiming the Right to Food as a Normative Response to the Global Food Crisis" (2011). New York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper 260.
http://lsr.nellco.org/nyu_plltwp/260
Included in
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