BUILDING RESILIENCE AND FOOD SOVEREIGNTY
As successfully meeting development and sustainability goals requires a paradigm shift, CIDSE advocates for radical changes towards just, resilient and sustainable models of food systems. We strongly believe that agroecology and its principles – when firmly rooted in food sovereignty and climate justice – are the way to move away from a model that threatens present and future agricultural production and food security (biodiversity losses, soil degradation, soil erosion…) while meeting the long-term goal of 1.5°C and contributing to the full realisation of the right to food.
CIDSE currently works to promote and advocate for agroecology within debates in civil society on these issues, and in high-level policy processes. We also gather and share experiences and knowledge in our network on agroecological systems and with movements that are applying the principles of agroecology.
To understand more about our position on food systems, read our landmark publication ‘The Principles of Agroecology’, available in 7 languages in pdf or as a multimedia website.

Manny Yap
yap(at)cidse.org
Stories
Publications
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Building stronger communities through agroecology: an essential step to fight
October 14, 2016Less than a year ago the Paris agreement on climate change was signed. I followed the negotiations closely, and when […]
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People’s solutions to climate and agriculture
October 14, 2016This year’s World Food Day theme, celebrated on October 16, reflects on the effects of climate change on our food […]
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Looking back at the workshop “Climate and Agriculture: Harvesting People’s
October 6, 2016[View the story “Climate and Agriculture: Harvesting People’s Solutions for Sustainable Food Systems ” on Storify]
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Setting the Scene to Dismantle Corporate Power in Southern Africa
October 5, 2016If you’re not there, it’s difficult to imagine the lives of the Zimbabwean women and children regularly sexually assaulted for […]
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Rural Women’s Assembly in Swaziland
October 5, 2016“There’s really no such thing as the ‘voiceless’. There are only the deliberately silenced or the preferably unheard.” (Arundhati Roy)









