Peasants’ rights and the UN system: Quixotic struggle? Or emancipatory idea
whose time has come?
Marc Edelman and Carwil James
The transnational agrarian social movement Vía Campesina is campaigning to have the
United Nations negotiate and implement a Declaration, and eventually an International
Convention, on Peasants’ Rights. This article analyzes the origins and demands of the
campaign and the place of the claimed rights in international law. Peasant organizations
hope to follow in the footsteps of indigenous peoples’ movements that participated in the
negotiations preceding the 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The peasants’ rights campaign has succeeded in linking its demands to discussions of the
right to food in the United Nations, where concern is growing over the approach of the
2015 target for realizing the Millennium Development Goals, in particular the halving of
the numbers of people suffering from hunger. The campaign is likely to face stiff
resistance from powerful UN member states, but could achieve substantial advances even
if the path to a convention is difficult or never completed.
Keywords: peasants; human rights; United Nations; Vía Campesina; transnational
agrarian movements; civil society; social movements
Introduction
This article analyzes one contemporary case in the long expansion of human rights, the campaign
of transnational agrarian movements – notably Vía Campesina – to have the United Nations
negotiate and implement a Declaration, and eventually an International Convention, on the
Rights of Peasants (Vía Campesina 2002, 2008b).1 This effort has recently made its first, halting
steps within the United Nations system. We begin with a brief discussion of the place of the
proposed Declaration in the international human rights regime. We then outline the late
twentieth-century rise of transnational agrarian movements, particularly Vía Campesina. Next
we analyze the genesis of the Peasants’ Rights Convention campaign and outline the rights
claimed in the draft text of the Declaration and their relation to those established in earlier
international human rights instruments. We argue that transnational agrarian movements’ efforts
to secure a Peasants’ Rights Declaration (and eventually a Convention) represent both the
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in The Journal of Peasant Studies, Volume 38,
Issue 1, 2011. Copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03066150.2010.538583
Earlier versions of this article were presented at the conference on Developing Food Policy: US & International
Perspectives, Yale Law School, 16–17 April, 2010, and the Roosevelt House Human Rights and International
Justice Faculty Seminar at Hunter College-CUNY, 6 October 2010. For comments on the manuscript the authors
thank participants in both of these fora, two anonymous reviewers for this journal, Jefferson Boyer, Elvira Basevich,
and Justine Simone. They also thank Elvira Basevich, Justine Simone and Kate Goff for research assistance.
Research was supported in part by grant #1024017 from the U.S. National Science Foundation (Cultural
Anthropology & Law and Social Science Programs).
1
In advocating for such a convention, Vía Campesina has produced the ‘Declaration of Rights of Peasants –
Women and Men’, sometimes called the ‘Declaration on Farmers’ Rights’ (Vía Campesina 2008b, 2008a, 2009a).
The term ‘farmers’ rights’ is used elsewhere to refer to traditional seed-saving practices that conflict with new
intellectual property regimes requiring seed certification and licensing (Borowiak 2004).
progressive extension of the existing human rights regime and a continuation of the
democratization of rights-making. This democratization was heralded by the three decades of
efforts to draft and approve the 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The
campaign’s strategy is to secure passage in the General Assembly of a nonbinding Declaration as
a first step toward a Convention, which, unlike a Declaration, would be considered binding on
signatory states and monitored by UN agencies (Vía Campesina 2009a, 4).
Given existing precedents, we then briefly consider what the negotiation and the adoption of
a Peasants’ Rights Convention are likely to entail. This effort could have radical consequences
if, against all odds, peasants prove to be the first economically defined grouping to win a widely
accepted human rights convention and, even more radically, enforceable rights to selfdetermination.2 Either achievement would be dramatic, however, and would give rise to some
daunting obstacles. Many powerful UN member states have long opposed any extension of
economic and social rights. Moreover, the international human rights regime is structured
fundamentally around states, while many of the violations of peasants’ rights that the proposed
Convention seeks to address result from the activities and policies of supra-state, transnational or
global and frequently unaccountable actors, especially – but not only – the World Trade
Organization (Narula 2010, Rosset 2006).
The article situates Vía Campesina’s campaign for a Peasants’ Rights Convention within
three broader processes. First, normative understandings of human rights have expanded over
long historical time, in ongoing processes of political contention. Rights that were once
considered inconceivable are now either accepted or seen as legitimate topics for discussion
(Archibugi 2008, Cowan et al. 2001, Donnelly 1989, Freeman 2002, Gernigon et al. 2000,
Glasius 2006, Goodale 2006, 2009, Hunt 2007, Merry 2003, Messer 1993, Risse-Kappen et al.
1999). Second, in recent decades UN agencies and other multilateral organizations have
increasingly engaged in new forms of collaboration with non-state actors, including social
movements and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) (Streets and Thomsen 2009). While
intergovernmental institutions such as the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) had earlier formed occasional ties with national-level civil society organizations, since
the early 1990s grassroots pressure has contributed to the emergence of durable alliances with
transnational social movements (Borras 2010, McKeon 2009). Third, as an outgrowth of the
first two processes, transnational social movements have sought to use global governance
institutions to deepen and institutionalize new conceptions of ‘rights’ that go beyond those
codified in existing international instruments. Indigenous movements secured unprecedented
influence in the structure and agenda of international organizations, generating institutions such
as the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (2002), gaining a regular seat at the table in
certain UN system meetings, and securing passage of the ILO Convention Concerning
Indigenous and Tribal Peoples (1989) and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
2
We will discuss briefly the other class-defined human rights convention, the Migrant Workers Convention, ratified
by 43 countries, which are generally migrant-sending rather than migrant-receiving. We use ‘economically defined
grouping’ here, because ‘class’ has different meanings in legal and social scientific thought. Agrarian activists and
scholars have long debated the class character of the peasantry in the sociological sense, a discussion that is beyond
the scope of this article (see Bernstein and Byres 2001, van der Ploeg 2008). For our purposes here, the
heterogeneity of contemporary peasantries in social class terms is beyond dispute, as is the reality that rights
violations may impact agriculturalists that are diverse in terms of resources, economic sectors, and production
relations.
2
Peoples (2007).3 Now, transnational agrarian movements are seeking to follow in their
footsteps.
Transnational agrarian movements’ incursion into rights making is an effort to legitimize
peasants’ autonomous right to choose their economic and environmental model at the local level;
this process is grounded in both the politics of the transnational agrarian movements themselves
and in the growing space within the UN system for recognizing autonomy and for deepening
rights to basic needs (such as food and water). This campaign is likely to face stiff resistance,
but could achieve substantial advances even if the path to a convention is difficult or never
completed.
The proposed Convention’s place in the global human rights regime
The United Nations system and the associated global human rights regime are among the most
thoroughly institutionalized instantiations of universalism. Founded with the Allied effort to win
World War II, the system grounded the postwar world order on an appeal to human rights and
universal peace. It forms a nexus of rights-making that, like other universals, ‘beckon[s] to elite
and excluded alike’ (Tsing 2005, 9). The international human rights regime has both this
universal face and a sometimes partial system of voluntary adherence by nation-states.4 In
general, nonbinding Declarations and international conferences have proclaimed rights to be
universal (that is, applying to all), interdependent, and indivisible.5 However, the binding nature
of both human rights and ILO labor rights Conventions has encouraged nations to be selective in
their ratification of these documents. Most dramatically, in 1966, differences between the United
States and Soviet Union led to two separate International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights
and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Lewis 2007, 119–21). More recently, both the
1990 UN Migrant Workers Convention and the 1978 ILO Rural Workers Convention were only
ratified by an interested minority of states.
Nonbinding Declarations, issued by vote of the United Nations General Assembly, often
precede more rigorous Conventions, which must be ratified by nation-states, are considered
binding on signatory member states, and are subject to review by monitoring agencies and, in
some cases, international courts. In the interim, Declarations serve as normative models for
governmental institutions, and are sometimes accepted as part of so-called customary
3
The 1989 agreement was Convention 169 of the International Labor Organization, a UN agency. It established the
rights of indigenous communities to their traditional territories and to the natural resources found in and on them.
The ‘first substantive decision’ of the UN Human Rights Council (created in 2006 to replace a UN Commission on
Human Rights tainted and dominated by undemocratic member states) was to approve the draft Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous People and to pass it on for a vote by the General Assembly. The 2007 Declaration by the UN
General Assembly reaffirmed the rights enumerated in 1989 and went far beyond them in terms of land and rights,
self-determination and political autonomy (Anaya and Wiessner 2007).
4
On the concept of an international human rights regime, see Donnelly (1986).
5
In particular, the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna declared, ‘All human rights are universal,
indivisible and interdependent and interrelated. The international community must treat human rights globally in a
fair and equal manner, on the same footing, and with the same emphasis’ (World Conference on Human Rights
1993). The framers of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights experienced considerable anguish over its
unenforceable, non-binding nature and its lack of legal limitations on the actions of states (Moyn 2010, 184–6,
Sellars 2002, 1–24). Some of them nonetheless viewed the Universal Declaration as a ‘moral force’ that contributed
to what today might be termed ‘norms evolution’.
3
international law (PFII 2010, paras. 23–26, Lillich 1995, O'Connell 2000, Anaya and Wiessner
2007).6 Intergovernmental institutions – including international financial institutions, regional
organizations such as the OAS and EU, and quasi-independent organizations such as the
Millennium Development Programme – may be uniquely influenced by the norms spelled out in
declarations.7 A series of declarations also enumerated sets of rights that might be thought of as
held by society: the right to peace, to scientific and technological progress, to a healthy
environment, to development and – relevantly to peasants’ rights – to food (United Nations
1986).
The Human Rights Convention framework is applied to distinct categories of rights holders,
ranging from all humans to discriminated racial groups (ICERD 1965), women (CEDAW 1979),
children (CRC 1989), migrant workers (ICRMW 1990), and people with disabilities (CRPD
2006), among others. Each human rights convention tends to reiterate universally held rights
before spelling out new ones within its particular area of concern. The evolving human rights
regime thus has a series of pre-existing priorities that are often incorporated into new
conventions.8 While each rights-claiming group is different, they go through a common pattern
of identifying themselves as a global part of the human condition, asserting an equal claim to
universal rights, and specifying rights that are particular to their unique situation. Vía
Campesina places itself squarely within this process. A fundamental argument for the Peasants’
Rights Convention, as summed up in a recent campaign statement, is that, ‘Almost half of the
people in the world are peasants… There are already conventions that protect [other] vulnerable
groups of people, such as indigenous peoples, women, children and migrant workers’ (Vía
Campesina 2009a, 1–3).9
[TABLE 1 ABOUT HERE]
6
Customary international law is that set of norms that arises from ‘consistent conduct of States acting out of the
belief that the law required them to act that way’ (Rosenne 1984, 55). Sometimes the interval between an initial
declaration and a legally binding treaty is substantial; the Declaration on the Rights of the Child, for example,
passed in 1959, but it took 30 years before the Convention on the Rights of the Child entered into force. In 1981,
the General Assembly approved the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of
Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief (GA 36/55), but no international treaty has yet been approved that
further protects freedom of belief (Burchill 2008, 55).
7
The OAS is currently drafting an American Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples in an echo of the UN
process. NGO pressure also led several IFIs (including the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank)
to adopt human rights monitoring procedures for their projects in the past twenty years (Wirth 1998). The UN
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (cited above) is encouraging the UNFCCC climate change process to
accommodate indigenous consultation and consent rights based on the UN Declaration. The July 2010 UN General
Assembly resolution on the human right to water and sanitation is already being contemplated as a tool to influence
the priorities of the Millennium Development Programme.
8
Core conventions, corresponding monitoring bodies and ratifying parties are listed by the UN High Commissioner
on Human Rights at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/
9
The claim that ‘almost half of the people in the world are peasants’ probably overstates the numbers of this group,
however it might be defined, and its proportional weight in the global population. Nonetheless, peasants, farmers
and agricultural laborers are still a major component of the world population, even though as countries industrialize,
the proportion of their economically active population in agriculture tends to decline. FAO data indicate that today
‘agriculture provides employment to 1.3 billion people worldwide, 97 percent of them in developing countries’
(World Bank 2007, 77).
4
Many of the rights enumerated in the draft Peasants’ Rights Declaration were specified in
other accords that date to early twentieth-century attempts to create an international human rights
regime in the aftermath of World War One (Rodgers et al. 2009, McKeon 2009). In the 1920s,
for example, the International Labor Organization approved several conventions on agricultural
workers’ rights, including minimum age (ILO-10), workmen’s compensation (ILO-12) and
health insurance (ILO-25). Not long after the founding of the United Nations, the 1948
Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirmed that everyone has the right to an adequate
standard of living, including food, housing, medical care, and ‘the right to security in the event of
unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in
circumstances beyond his control’ (United Nations 1948, Art. 25). The 1966 International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) reiterated the specification in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the right to organize and to enjoy an adequate
standard of living; it also established ‘the fundamental right of everyone to be free from hunger’
(United Nations 1966, Art. 11).10 Despite the recognition of this right, peasants (whose daily life
involves food production) now make up half of the world’s hungry. Stepping into the gap
between the right to food and the failure to eliminate hunger, Vía Campesina coordinator Henry
Saragih indicated in 2005, ‘with regards to the rights concerning food, the ESCR [i.e., ICESCR ]
only mentions access to food as the fulfillment of rights to food, whereas the right to produce
food is much more fundamental to fulfilling the rights to food’ (Saragih 2005, 7, italics added).11
The rise of transnational agrarian movements
That peasant organization activists such as Saragih now speak before the United Nations and
other international organizations is indicative of a recent upsurge of new kinds of agrarian
activism. These movements, which emerged in the late 1980s and early 1990s, have their
proximate origins in the global farm crisis that began in the 1970s. The main features of the
1970s crisis were skyrocketing prices for petroleum and oil-based inputs, particularly fertilizer
and pesticides; sharply higher interest rates, resulting from oil-price shocks and monetary
policies intended to slow inflation; and the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system of capital
controls and fixed exchange rates, which in turn led to a rapid expansion and liberalization of
global food trade (Greider 2000, Helleiner 1994, McMichael 1998). Liberalized trade, especially
after the 1995 founding of the World Trade Organization, encouraged highly subsidized
commodity producers, mainly in the European Union and the United States, to ‘dump’
inexpensive exports in developing countries, often glutting agricultural markets and ruining
farmers’ livelihoods. At the same time, growing ownership concentration among seed, input,
machinery and credit suppliers, and in the processing, storage, brokering, and exporting stages of
key commodity chains, allowed a handful of giant corporations to garner a rising share of the
total value added between the farm gate and the dinner plate (Kneen 2002, D. Morgan 1980). In
10
The ICESCR entered into force in 1976.
Saragih’s comment echoes the 2002 declaration of social movements that attended the World Food Summit +5
and that went on to found the International Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty. This statement defined food
sovereignty as including ‘the true right to food and to produce food, which means that all people have the right to
safe, nutritious and culturally appropriate food and to food-producing resources and the ability to sustain themselves
and their societies’ (NGO/CSO Forum for Food Sovereignty 2002, italics added).
11
5
poorer countries the 1980s debt crisis, also rooted in part in rising interest rates and oil import
bills, brought neoliberal reforms that further devastated small agricultural producers accustomed
to guaranteed prices, low-interest loans from public-sector banks and state-sponsored extension
services.12 More recently, the impacts of climate change, growing demand for biofuels and a
new wave of land speculation have further exacerbated the already tenuous situation of smallscale agriculturalists in numerous world regions (Bryceson et al. 2000, Kay 2008, IAASTD
2009, Kloppenburg 2010, GRAIN 2008, van der Ploeg 2008).
By the early 1990s, these diverse onslaughts on living standards and livelihoods, as well as
new forms of communication, cheaper travel, and the end of the Cold War and of military
regimes in Latin America, spurred a wave of transnational advocacy groups and NGOs in
addition to and alongside the agrarian movements (e.g. of women, indigenous peoples, ethnic
and sexual minorities, environmentalists, human rights advocates, the disabled, and others).
Because global governance was expanding its reach and because many pressing health,
environmental, social and economic problems transcended national boundaries, these new
networks, coalitions and movements became increasingly involved in contesting the direction of
the international financial institutions, the World Trade Organization, the G-8 heads of state, and
various UN agencies. They also organized their own ‘parallel summits’ (Pianta 2001) and – since
2001 – the annual World (and regional) Social Forums (Whitaker et al. 2006).13
The loosely organized global justice movement was, however, divided over the possibilities
of engaging with the powerful international governance institutions that were behind the rush to
economic liberalization. One segment, which we will call the ‘grassroots wing’, advocated farreaching, radical reforms of the world economic order, took a rejectionist stance towards
participating in economic summits, and asserted the local right to autonomous choice of
economic model and control over resources.14 Rather than demand a seat at the table, or put
forward proposals to institutions such as the WTO, IMF and World Bank, these movements
sought to restrict the scope of these bodies’ jurisdiction and to shut down their meetings. Under
movement proposals, water and other essential services were to be excluded from privatization
and commodification;15 projects on indigenous traditional lands would require the consent of
12
In an historic reversal, these reforms, encouraged or imposed by the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund, dismantled the commodities boards and the systems of subsidies for inputs, machinery, fuel, water, and credit
that the World Bank had helped to set up in the 1950s and 1960s in order to make capital-intensive agriculture
possible in conditions of poverty (Shiva 2001).
13
Several scholars have analyzed distinctions between networks, coalitions and movements (Fox 2005, 2010,
Edelman 2005). Because Vía Campesina and its allies have characteristics of all three organizational forms, such
distinctions are not of central importance here.
14
People's Global Action, for example, an alliance that lasted from from 1998 to 2006, included several Vía
Campesina member organizations. It characterized itself as having ‘a confrontational attitude, since we do not think
that lobbying can have a major impact in such biased and undemocratic organisations, in which transnational capital
is the only real policy-maker’ (Peoples' Global Action 2001). A list of convenors of PGA provided by Juris (2008)
includes Vía Campesina members such as the Landless Workers Movement (Brazil), Krishok Federation
(Bangladesh), Karnataka State Farmers Association (India), and the Nationwide Federation of Landless Peasants
(Philippines).
15
Eight months after the 2000 ‘water war’ in Cochabamaba, Bolivia, organizers of the anti-privatization uprising
hosted a gather of water activists called ‘Water: Globalization, Privatization, and the Search for Alternatives’. The
conference’s Cochabamba Declaration put forward a global call for a human right to water, urging that, ‘These
rights must be enshrined at all levels of government. In particular, an international treaty must ensure these
principles are noncontrovertable’ (Cochabamba Declaration 2000). This demand was incorporated into the 2009
6
indigenous peoples; and agriculture was to be kept out of the WTO’s purview (Vía Campesina
1999, Rosset 2006). To some degree, all of these positions embraced local autonomy as an
alternative to global market competition and transnational corporate structures. These local
bastions were repositories for a contest between social models, places where the local,
indigenous, self-governing, renewable, organic, and diverse are extensively embraced, and from
which they can be defended (Escobar 2001, Nash 2005). This grassroots wing of the global
justice movement has also been richly productive of new normative concepts, such as food
sovereignty, biopiracy, Creative Commons, and autonomous municipalities, among others.16
The new transnational agrarian movements of the 1990s, which included Vía Campesina, the
International Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty, and ROPPA,17 gained considerable
visibility as interlocutors with the news media, national governments, international institutions,
and other civil society organizations. The most dynamic of these new transnational movements is
Vía Campesina, founded in Belgium in 1993, which now links some 150 organizations of smalland medium-sized agricultural producers, landless, rural women, indigenous people, and
agricultural workers in almost seventy countries in the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Africa
(Edelman 2003, Borras 2004, Desmarais 2007, Borras et al. 2008). The membership is diverse
and includes landless peasants in Brazil, small dairy farmers in Europe, well-off farmers in South
India, wheat producers in Canada, and land-poor peasants in Mexico. The main issues of concern
to Vía Campesina include the liberalization of global agricultural trade, intellectual property and
genetically modified organisms, the survival of family farms, sustainable alternatives to
industrial agriculture, agrarian reform, the human rights of peasants and peasant activists, and
‘food sovereignty’, which it describes as each country’s right to determine the shape of its own
food systems, to protect national and especially nonindustrial, smallholder production, and to
shield domestic markets from the dumping of low-priced agricultural imports (Ishii-Eiteman
2009, Patel 2009).18
The heterogeneity of the national and sub-national organizations that have joined Vía
Campesina makes for an internal politics that is complex and sometimes contentious, with
different regional and class groupings at times promoting distinct priorities for the movement as
a whole (Borras et al. 2008, Martínez-Torres and Rosset 2010). Vía Campesina and its
component sub-national, national and regional organizations have nonetheless often presented a
united face in global civil society gatherings, such as the World Social Forums (Marcuse 2005),
and in theatrical protests against large agribusiness corporations, the World Trade Organization,
the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), and G-8 governments.
Vía Campesina briefly entered into dialogue with the World Bank over the Bank’s proposals
for ‘market-assisted agrarian reform’ (Via Campesina 1999, Edelman 2003, 207), but in general
Bolivian Constitution, and encouraged the 2010 UN General Assembly Resolution on the Right to Water and
Sanitation.
16
Food sovereignty, advanced by Vía Campesina, is discussed below. Biopiracy describes the appropriation of
agricultural lifeforms and knowledge for profit (Shiva 1999). Creative Commons is a legal schema created to legally
facilitate the use and circulation of creative intellectual property without payment, but according to the wishes of the
creator. Autonomous municipalities, proposed and implemented by the Zapatistas and the Mexican indigenous
movement, create local forms of governance at the municipal level.
17
ROPPA is Réseau des Organisations Paysannes et des Producteurs Agricoles de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (Network of
Farmers and Agricultural Producers’ Organizations of West Africa).
18
Vía Campesina is always referred to by its Spanish name, which means ‘the peasant way’.
7
it has been skeptical about, if not hostile toward, the Bank, the IMF, the WTO, and the G-8 and
ready to identify them as its enemies (Martínez-Torres and Rosset 2010, 162, Nelson 2002).
While this rejectionist position places Vía Campesina squarely within the ‘grassroots’ wing of
the global justice movement, the organization has nonetheless institutionalized working
partnerships with several United Nations agencies, such as the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) (see
below). Vía Campesina has also managed to achieve significant and largely favorable coverage
in international media. Following the violence outside the 2001 G-8 summit in Genoa, for
example, Newsweek singled out Vía Campesina as one of eight ‘kinder, gentler globalist’ groups
behind the anti-G-8 protests (Newsweek 2001). In 2008, the London Guardian included Vía
Campesina coordinator and Indonesian peasant leader Henry Saragih in its list of ‘ultimate green
heroes’, the ‘50 people who could save the planet’ (Guardian 2008).
Much of the political potency of the new transnational civil society of which Vía Campesina
is a part derives from what Keck and Sikkink (1998, 12–3) famously termed ‘the boomerang
pattern’.19 Essentially, movements that are unable to attain their objectives in domestic politics
seek out international allies to intervene in local situations or to pressure governments to modify
national standards to conform to international norms. International campaigns against sweatshop
labor conditions and for the criminalization of marital rape typify these two strategies.20 In the
case of the Peasants’ Rights Convention campaign, the proponents’ objective is not just to secure
compliance with international norms, but to shift the norms themselves. Such normative shifts
facilitate external international pressure on governments and affect policymaking by
international institutions. The creation of international standards can also encourage the
evolution of national norms by providing a readily available template for constitutions and
legislation. The advent of struggles that involve shifting venues to global governance bodies thus
requires analyzing not only the ‘changing global imaginary of social justice’ (Gledhill 2003, 212)
and how claims about universal rights norms emerge, are contested and gain traction (Finnemore
and Sikkink 1998, Tsing 2005). It also requires attention to the ways in which transnational
advocacy groups and international institutions mutually constitute each other (HowardHassmann 2005) and to the limitations of ‘boomerang’ strategies when activists seek to alter
trade and financial policies imposed by supra-state bodies, such as the WTO (Edelman 2009,
124–5, Nelson 2002).
Rights claims by transnational agrarian movements
Scholars of collective action, social movements and democracy point to ‘the invention and
creation of new rights’ (Dagnino 1998, 50) and of whole ‘new categories of rights’ (Archibugi
2008, 21) as key elements in contemporary contentious politics and in the long historical
19
Others have variously called it ‘venue shifting’ (Van Rooy 2004, 20) or ‘leap-frogging’ (O'Brien et al. 2000, 61).
Anti-sweatshop campaigners have repeatedly invoked international norms while petitioning and pressuring
transnational corporations. They sought to convert the latter into (often unwilling or resistant) tools to ensure
adherence to global labor standards. On the other hand, the effort to criminalize marital rape won international
legitimacy as a requirement of the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW), in part through the Beijing Women’s Conference. Since then, changes to national laws on marital rape
have been demanded through the periodic review process of the Convention, adding to local campaigns for
criminalization.
20
8
evolution of more inclusive and open societies. Variously referred to as ‘the expansion of the
human rights concept’ (Messer 1993, 222) or ‘norms evolution’ (Hertel 2006, 263), this trend
accelerated in the early to mid-twentieth century with the first efforts to construct an
international human rights regime and then again in the 1990s when new transnational social
movements and NGOs sought to broaden existing rights frameworks (Glasius 2006). In the
study of social movements and contentious politics, prevailing ‘concepts’ or ‘norms’ are
important because they become reference points for rights claims, for conceptualizing
entitlement and obligation, and for the ‘invention’ of new rights. Some scholars argue that
‘norms evolution’ occurs in a three-stage sequence or ‘life cycle’ that commences with an
‘emergence’ phase; continues to a tipping point, ‘norms cascade’ or ‘bandwagon’; and ends with
the ‘internalization’ of the norm in common practice, legal instruments and institutions
(Finnemore and Sikkink 1998, 895).
The specifically human rights-oriented aspects of Vía Campesina’s global campaign for an
International Convention on Peasants’ Rights should be understood in the context of the
coalition’s broader attempts at normative shifts. Martínez and Rosset’s (2010) history of Vía
Campesina describes an increasing interest in a ‘struggle among models’: changing the
economics, technology, and practice of agriculture globally by offering alternatives. ‘Food
sovereignty’, for example, is an umbrella term for an alternative agricultural and economic
model that Vía Campesina counterposes to chemical-based, industrial agriculture for export
(Ishii-Eiteman 2009, Patel 2009, Martínez-Torres and Rosset 2010, 168–70). Vía Campesina’s
adoption of a more explicit human rights discourse mirrors a shift in the practice of transnational
indigenous, anti-privatization, and environmentalist movements in the same period, some of
whom now call for a ‘Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth’ (World People’s
Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth 2010).
The proposal for an ‘International Convention on the Rights of Peasants’ emerged from a
2000 Workshop on Peasants’ Rights in North Sumatra, a 2001 conference on agrarian reform in
Jakarta, and a 2002 Vía Campesina conference in Jakarta, which published the first draft text of a
proposed Declaration (Vía Campesina 2002, Golay 2009a, 2009b, 2009c, Saragih 2005).
Championed by Asian – especially Indonesian – Vía Campesina member organizations, the idea
was quickly adopted by the broader, transnational coalition (Vía Campesina 2002). The
campaign developed in collaboration with two European NGOs, first the Geneva-based Centre
Europe-Tiers Monde (CETIM) and later the Heidelberg-based Foodfirst Information and Action
Network (FIAN). Its activities have included sending human rights fact-finding missions to
more than a dozen countries, the publication of three annual compendiums on ‘peasant rights
violations’ (FIAN and Vía Campesina 2004, Vía Campesina 2005, 2006), and lobbying at the
UN General Assembly (Saragih 2009), the UN Human Rights Council (Golay 2009b, 18), and
other UN agencies.21
The first draft of the Peasants’ Rights Declaration, published in stilted English and somewhat
more polished French and Spanish (Vía Campesina 2002), detailed a bundle of rights, many of
21
It has also included regional lobbying of ASEAN governments. The annual reports on ‘peasants’ rights
violations’ focus largely on countries where Vía Campesina has member organizations (e.g. Thailand, the
Philippines, Brazil, Honduras, Colombia, Indonesia, South Africa, and India). In a trenchant analysis of peasant
resistance in contemporary China, Walker (2008, 479) laments that Vía Campesina’s ‘annual reports of “Violations
of Peasants’ Human Rights” virtually ignore this area of the world where one in three peasants reside’.
9
which were already part of existing UN Conventions (see below). Human rights scholars once
distinguished ‘first generation’ civil and political rights, ‘second generation’ socioeconomic and
cultural rights, ‘third generation’ development rights, and ‘fourth generation’ indigenous rights
(Messer 1993, 222–3, Viljoen 2009, 8–9). Some activists today employ the term ‘new
generation’ rights, particularly when referring to demands related to ‘food sovereignty’,
‘ecological debt’, 22 and access to information about and participation in international economic
decision-making processes. Many of the rights enumerated in the draft Peasants’ Rights
Declaration are, however, arguably ‘first’, ‘second’ or ‘third generation’ rights already part of
existing international instruments. Among these are the rights of ‘peasant women and men’ to
freedom of association and expression, physical integrity, personal security, health, food, and
water for consumption and irrigation, as well as freedom from political persecution and from
discrimination ‘based on their economic, social and cultural status’ (Vía Campesina 2009a, Vía
Campesina Asia 2009).
Other rights enumerated in the draft Declaration, however, were indicative of an effort to
push existing norms beyond their current bounds, such as claims of a ‘right to reject’ intellectual
property of crop genetic material or demands for participation in international economic
policymaking processes. The authors of the draft Declaration sought to achieve these objectives
in part through asserting that peasants, like native peoples, are a vulnerable group, with culturally
specific characteristics and practices that deserve international recognition and protection.
Vía Campesina’s draft Declaration on Peasants’ Rights also aims implicitly to supersede the
old ‘generations’ paradigm for analyzing rights. The ‘generations’ approach mirrors a division
that dates to 1966 when differences between the United States and Soviet Union led to two
separate International Covenants on civil and political rights and on economic, social and
cultural rights (Lewis 2007, 119–21).23 In the post-Cold War period a pronounced contradiction
persists between developed-country governments that support (or claim to support) political
rights and developing-country governments that prioritize (or claim to prioritize) economic and
social rights. Scholars, legal professionals and social movement activists have, however,
increasingly moved beyond the ‘generations’ framework, for several reasons. First, it creates a
false dichotomy between so-called ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ freedoms (i.e. what a state should
and should not do), when both kinds of rights are – in the words of the 1993 Vienna UN Human
Rights Conference – ‘interdependent and indivisible’ and potentially entail a range of obligations
on the state (Shafir and Brysk 2006, 283, Viljoen 2009, 9). Second, transnational processes of
migration and civil society activism increasingly call into question understandings of rights that
are contingent on citizenship in a state rather than on an individual’s humanity or membership in
22
Ecological debt, according to an Ecuadorian organization in the forefront of the movement, is ‘the debt
accumulated by Northern, industrial countries toward Third World countries on account of resource plundering,
environmental damages, and the free occupation of environmental space to deposit wastes, such as greenhouse
gases, from the industrial countries.’ Its mechanisms include ‘the ecologically unequal terms of trade caused by
goods being exported without taking into account the social and environmental damages caused by their extraction
or production [and] the intellectual appropriation and the use of ancestral knowledge related to seeds, the use of
medicinal plants and other knowledge, upon which the biotechnology and the modern agro-industries are based, and
for which, we [in the Global South] have to pay royalties’ (Acción Ecológica 2005).
23
The United States signed the latter Covenant in 1977, but has never ratified it; it only ratified the ICCPR in 1992.
The Soviet Union signed both accords but opposed the optional protocol of the ICCPR that allowed for international
review of citizen complaints.
10
a rights-bearing group (Fraser 2003, 91, Shafir and Brysk 2006, 279). Finally, a consensus is
emerging (at the rhetorical if not always at the institutional level) within the United Nations and
major NGOs such as Amnesty International that peace and security, development and human
rights are inextricably linked and that the realization of the Millennium Development Goals in
2015 depends on a coherent and integrated approach that recognizes and strengthens all three of
these ‘pillars’ (Domínguez Redondo 2009).
The indigenous rights model and the peasants’ rights campaign
The international process that led to the 2007 Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
was a path-breaking transformation of the UN human rights framework. Previously, human
rights declarations and conventions had been negotiated among state actors, with only
‘consultative’ input from civil society organizations. However, in the lead up to the 2007
Declaration indigenous representatives worked within the drafting process (through an
overwhelming presence at the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations, which
completed the draft Declaration in 1994, and through a standing indigenous caucus in later
stages) and well beyond it, generating new UN institutions and successfully codifying a right to
dialogue directly with UN member states (Morgan 2007, Muehlebach 2001). Through elements
of the Declaration that concern consultation, as well as through this procedural precedent,
indigenous activists advanced the principle that people who are the subject of a rights document
are entitled to participate in its framing.24 The Peasants’ Rights Convention campaign attempts to
use this model as a precedent for the participation of affected parties in global governance. At
the core of Vía Campesina’s adoption of this precedent is the culturalization of peasants spelled
out in Article IX and alluded to elsewhere in the draft Declaration: ‘the right to the recognition
and protection of their culture and local agriculture values’ (Vía Campesina 2009a). In effect,
peasants are represented not only as ‘rights holders’, but as the same kind of culture-possessing
population that indigenous people are recognized to be within the indigenous rights regime.
Recent human rights scholarship by anthropologists and others has pointed to the growing
deployment and reification of ‘culture’ as an argument for group or collective rights, as well as
to how universal rights concepts are taken up, reinterpreted and transformed in the context of
local struggles (Cowan et al. 2001). Some have noted the irony that just when anthropologists
have largely abandoned notions of culture as fixed, homogeneous and bounded, activists have
seized upon these same traditional ideas of culture as discursive frames for mobilizing around
collective rights claims (Kuper 1999, 1–20, Warren and Jackson 2002, 8–12, Hale 2006). The
apparent incompatibility of liberal universalism, on the one hand, and of cultural relativism and
later multiculturalism, on the other, has been a central preoccupation of human rights scholarship
for decades (Benhabib 2002, Okin 1999, Merry 2006b). This tension is likely to be a key fault
line in UN debates over whether to adopt the Peasants’ Rights Declaration. The distinctiveness
24
More generally, the intensification of global civil society activity in the 1990s generated momentum in the UN
system for institutional changes that opened new space for social movements and NGOs, notably during the 1990
World Conference for Children in New York and the 1992 Rio de Janeiro Conference on Environment and
Development. After 1996, UN reforms broadened criteria for granting NGOs ‘consultative status’ with UN
agencies. The trend intensified following the 2004 report of the ‘Cardoso Panel’ on United Nations-civil society
relations chaired by former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso (Falk 2006, McKeon 2009, Willetts
2006).
11
of peasants as a social, cultural and/or economic category has also been an ongoing discussion in
agrarian studies and applied development work (Bryceson et al. 2000, Bernstein and Byres 2001,
Silverman 1979, van der Ploeg 2008). This too could complicate the advance of the Peasants’
Rights campaign, since advocates will not only have to explain why existing universal
instruments do not adequately guarantee the claimed rights, but also argue for the specificity of
the rights bearers (see below).
The draft Peasants’ Rights Declaration generally claims that peasants should have rights
similar to those now recognized by the Indigenous Rights Declaration, such as rights to selforganization, and self-governance in their own ‘territories’, and to ‘free, prior, and informed
consent’ for projects affecting them. The right to consent is boldly expanded in the draft
Peasants’ Rights Declaration into the ‘right to actively participate in policy design, decision
making, implementation, and monitoring of any project, program or policy affecting their
territories’. It is accompanied by a ‘right to reject’ a large number of outside interventions,
policies, and forms of agriculture, including privately held market intelligence, threats to
biological diversity, patenting of crop genetic material, and prohibitions on seed saving and
exchange, such as the bans on planting or selling farmer-produced or non-certified seeds that
now exist in the European Union and many other countries (Kästler 2005, Kloppenburg 2010).
Finally, the draft Declaration embraces a ‘right to resist oppression and to resort to peaceful
direct action’ on the part of peasants, which is a major extension of the existing right to strike.
Advancing the peasants’ rights agenda in international institutions
The 1996 FAO World Food Summit in Rome marked the first, massive incursion of
transnational peasant and farmer organizations into the UN policy-making process. Hundreds of
agrarian activists from various organizations and world regions attended the summit, though
most were only able to secure observer status or participate in the ‘parallel’ civil society forum
(McKeon 2009). The Summit nonetheless set in motion a process of redefining the right to food
– one of the central missions of the FAO – from access to adequate staples for consumption to
culturally integrated food production.25 Emblematic of this systemic shift were the 1999 General
Comment No. 12 on implementing the right to adequate food under the Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR 1999); the 2000 appointment of the first UN Special
Rapporteur on the Right to Food; the 2002 World Food Summit + 5, which attracted an even
larger number of agrarian activists and which, some months after its conclusion, led to
strengthened participation of civil society actors in intergovernmental committees and improved
access to the FAO Secretariat;26 and the formation of an intergovernmental working group for
the drafting of voluntary guidelines to assist states in achieving the right to food (Windfuhr
2006). In 2006 the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development initiated an ongoing
Farmers’ Forum (IFAD 2006). In 2001–2009, the Special Rapporteur sent investigative missions
to over a dozen poor and developing countries. In 2009 the FAO’s Committee on Food Security
was opened to full civil society participation (Agricoltura Italiana 2009).
25
This process of redefinition paralleled the emergence of demands for ‘food sovereignty’ and the intensifying
critique of technical measures of ‘food security’.
26
Edelman’s recorded interviews with Costa Rican, Nicaraguan, Canadian, and Dutch participants in 1996 Rome
FAO and 2001 Rome +5 events.
12
In March 2009, Basque farmer activist Paul Nicholson represented Vía Campesina in
sessions of the UN Human Rights Council on the global food crisis (Golay 2009b, 18). In April
2009, Vía Campesina Coordinator Henry Saragih spoke before the General Assembly, urging it
to adopt the Peasants’ Rights Convention (Saragih 2009). In January 2010 the Fourth Special
Session of the Advisory Committee of the UN Human Rights Council, meeting in Geneva, heard
again from Saragih, who urged the Council to adopt ‘a new legal framework with clear standards
to recognise the basic rights of more than 2.2 billion … peasants in the world’ (Saragih 2010,
Vía Campesina 2010a). In February 2010 the Advisory Committee submitted its report on
‘discrimination in the context of the right to food’ (UN Human Rights Council 2010). The
report, authored by Jean Ziegler (the first Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food), José
Bengoa, Chinsung Chung, Latif Hüseynov, and Mona Zulficar, included as an appendix the
entire text of the draft Peasants’ Rights Declaration. In March the Geneva Academy of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights organized a conference titled ‘A New
Initiative to Protect the Rights of Peasants’, where Olivier de Schutter, the Special Rapporteur on
the Right to Food, declared that the Peasants’ Rights initiative was ‘intertwining’ with the right
to food (Vía Campesina 2010). Also in March 2010 the Cuban delegation to the Human Rights
Council introduced a resolution urging the full Council to adopt the Peasants’ Rights Declaration
(Vía Campesina 2010).
In essence, the draft Peasants’ Rights Declaration’s perspective on the right to food is being
incorporated directly into the UN agenda as a result of years of civil society pressure within the
FAO, the UNHRC and other agencies, the very significant presence of peasants among those in
need of food, and the approach of the 2015 target date for the Millennium Development Goals.
Notably absent from the discussion so far, however, are elements of the draft Peasants’ Rights
Declaration that demand rights to conserve and exchange or sell traditional seed varieties, to
intervene in markets and set prices, to participate in economic decision-making at the
international and national levels, and ‘to reject interventions that can destroy local agricultural
values’ (Vía Campesina 2009a).
Conclusion: prospects for success and key areas of contention
Would an International Convention on Peasants’ Rights make a difference and, if so, how?
International human rights conventions have a ‘dual nature as both instrumental and expressive
instruments’ (Hathaway 2002, 1940). On the one hand, they establish legally binding obligations
that require signatory states to conform to treaty norms. They also create monitoring and
enforcement mechanisms. On the other, they permit countries to express their position on key
rights issues − whether genuine or not − to the international community. Not surprisingly, UN
member states have generally shown a willingness to pass new nonbinding declarations on
diversifying areas of concern, but they have been reticent to agree to legal instruments that limit
their sovereign power. As Jack Donnelly (1989, 152) points out ‘the [further] move to
implementation or enforcement… involves a major qualitative jump that most states resist, with
considerable vigor when necessary, and usually with success’.
Scholars and activists are divided about the extent to which and how international human
rights agreements contribute to improving conditions. While the relevant debates are largely
beyond the scope of this article, advocates of diverse approaches – and especially those
13
influenced by the new legal realism – concur that the expressive aspects of human rights law
may have their own practical effects and that scholars need to consider how human rights are
‘vernacularized’ in ‘local social settings’ (Merry 2006b, 38, Moyn 2010, 218–9) and how ‘ideas
and the documents that express them are… disseminated and appropriated by social movements
and political elites’ (Merry 2006a, 977, Garth 2006, Zerilli 2010).27 Scholars working in the
tradition of the new legal realism, like the older realists in international relations, are skeptical
about the direct mandatory effect of laws and argue that laws’ effects are mediated by social
practices and political priorities. In analyzing the social processes that surround legal norms, the
new legal realism (unlike the older realism) tends to accord considerable importance to
institutions other than state regimes, including global governance organizations and the
associated bodies of international law and regulation. New legal realist studies of human rights
have, however, found meaningful effects of even non-mandatory norms when movements and
governments engage in efforts to spread awareness of new norms, or use shame, monitoring,
pressure tactics, and ‘social pressure to appear civilized’ to encourage compliance (Merry 1992,
2006a, 101).
Nonbinding legal instruments are also the domain of soft law scholarship. This field
examines the wide variety of nonbinding guidelines, norms, and protocols that proliferate at the
national and international level. Such norms are particularly influential in institutional contexts,
where they can − and often do − serve as templates for national policies, standards of evaluation,
and the basis of expected behavior. Non-treaty agreements may also contribute to confidencebuilding, to the creation of a preliminary regime that can develop further in stages, and to
achieving consensus and avoiding problems with domestic ratification processes and recalcitrant
states (Hillgenberg 1999, 501). At the international level, beyond states and binding law, there is
now a ‘burgeoning of sites from which actors and institutions practice and perceive normativity’
(Zerilli 2010, 7). Within the UN system, this diversity in norms production has prompted the UN
International Law Commission to urge different UN ‘subsystems’ to act consistently to maintain
effectiveness. In the view of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, this requires UN
agencies to structure their work in harmony with UN human rights declarations (PFII 2010, 10).
Could the United Nations adopt an International Convention on Peasants’ Rights? While the
issue of peasants’ rights has been put on the table at the United Nations, it remains only a
proposal. The path from proposal to Declaration and on to either a Convention and/or substantive
change is fraught with difficulties. The broad similarities between their rights-making processes
make the trajectory of the Indigenous Rights Declaration a useful point of comparison for
considering the prospects for success of a Peasants’ Rights Convention. Indigenous peoples
began their intervention in UN rights-making processes as an outsider group, whose historical
claims were in direct conflict with many existing nation-states and whose future existence as
distinct communities was not broadly accepted by reigning ideologies. While agriculture is an
inevitable part of human existence, a variety of ideological positions view peasant communities
built around traditional or small-scale agricultural practices as something of a relic (Handy 2009,
van der Ploeg 2008, 2). Peasants in Vía Campesina see themselves as having, like indigenous
peoples, an interest in asserting their right to continued self-defined existence and in inserting a
‘peasant perspective’ into planning of the human future.
27
Hathaway (2002) provides an able summary of different theoretical approaches, as well as a cross-national
empirical test of the effectiveness of five international and five regional human rights treaties.
14
The experience of indigenous peoples demonstrates that transforming universal rights norms
is an uphill process and one which nation-states are willing to devote substantial resources to
opposing, or at least complicating.28 Collective rights were a particular point of contention in the
indigenous rights-making process. The term ‘peoples’, with its connotations of cultural
distinctiveness and connection to the right to self-determination in international law, was
bracketed in negotiations of the Indigenous Declaration for over a decade (Davis 2008, 463).
Western states also deployed a liberal argument against collective rights, arguing that only
individuals can hold certain rights, and that all collective arrangements were to be worked out
through electoral and legislative processes, rather than allowing some communities rights to
greater self-determination. Indeed, the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, all
countries with substantial native populations, were the only member states to vote against the
2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. All four in practice accord at least
some sovereign (or quasi-sovereign) rights to substantial indigenous minorities, but they were
also clearly concerned about the impact on their sovereign power of a comprehensive rights
regime. The United States Mission to the United Nations, in explaining its negative vote,
maintained that the declaration’s ‘failure to define the phrase “indigenous peoples”’ is
‘debilitating to the effective application and implementation of the declaration’ and that ‘[t]his
obvious shortcoming will subject application of the declaration to endless debate, especially if
entities not properly entitled to such status seek to enjoy the special benefits and rights contained
in the declaration’ (quoted in Anaya and Wiessner 2007). Whatever the merits of these
arguments, one can reasonably expect them to be deployed again with respect to substantial
portions of the Peasants’ Rights Declaration, which at best will make its drafting and
proclamation an extended endeavor.
One alternative scenario for a Peasants’ Rights Convention would be that a committed
minority of states may embrace it, as was the case with the Migrant Workers and Rural Workers
conventions mentioned above. This could also result in regional groupings or ideological blocs,
such as the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) or the Venezuelan-led Bolivarian
Alliance for the Americas (ALBA), developing a peasants’ rights framework. The Venezuelan
government’s support for other Vía Campesina efforts, such as the peasant-directed Institute of
Agro-Ecology that opened in the state of Barinas in 2006, is one indication that such a
development is within the realm of possibility.29 The 2010 Cuban motion to have the UN
Human Rights Council adopt the Peasants’ Rights Declaration (mentioned above) is another (Vía
Campesina 2010). In 2010 Ecuador, another ALBA member, was the first country to ratify the
Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which
will allow individuals and groups within the country to seek UN intervention if these rights are
violated (Amnesty International USA 2010).
At least two other issues are likely to be major points of contention: the right to land, and the
right of peasant communities to reject a range of practices. Land reform and associated property
28
After ten years of negotiating a text introduced by indigenous peoples in 1995, just two of 45 articles had been
adopted (Cooper 2005).
29
ALBA is the Alianza Bolivariana para los Pueblos de Nuestra América, an alliance of populist and left-leaning
governments in Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Ecuador and various small Caribbean countries. In 2005 the
Venezuelan government signed a technical cooperation agreement with Vía Campesina to create an Institute of
Agro-Ecology, coordinated by Latin American Vía Campesina member organizations. The Institute enrolled its first
class of 250 students in 2006.
15
rights have been among the most contentious issues in international human rights law, around
which no global consensus exists. While the issue of agrarian reform had largely dropped off the
agenda of international development institutions in the 1980s, by the mid 1990s peasant and
farmer organizations succeeded in reintroducing it as a policy priority. Land reform enjoys
broad support in sub-Saharan Africa and as an element of responsible governance in Latin
America. Nonetheless, the new attention to agrarian reform has also involved a ‘struggle
between models’, as proponents of state-led redistributive reforms have squared off against the
World Bank and its programs of ‘market-assisted’ agrarian reform (Barros et al. 2003, Deininger
2003, Lahiff et al. 2007, Rosset et al. 2006). In advancing the peasants’ rights campaign, Vía
Campesina-affiliated movements in countries such as India and South Korea may be capable of
the kind of mobilizations that secured Latin American governments’ ratification of ILO
Convention 169. National land policies are, however, extremely varied within and across
regions, and existing regional human rights conventions differ extensively on the topic.30
Specific rights in the draft Declaration to both use and own ‘non-productive state lands’ and to
security of tenure are likely to be highly controversial. Although a vague consensus may emerge
around ‘the right to benefit from land reform’, the draft’s blanket ban on latifundia or large,
unproductive properties will surely draw objections.
Transnational agrarian movements have advanced a critique of a number of economic and
technological systems they see as being imposed on the constituencies they represent, including
monocrop production for export, genetically engineered seeds, chemical fertilizer-dependent
production, and patenting of crop genetic material and other agricultural knowledge. The
proposed Declaration addresses these concerns through the repeated use of the term ‘the right to
reject’, a right that would be exercised at the community (or perhaps regional or national) level.
Conceptually, this right rests on the political right of peasant communities to direct their own
affairs and on the integrity of peasant societies, in which the cultural, social, technological, and
economic domains are perceived as interlinked. Or, as the draft Peasants’ Rights Declaration
echoes the Indigenous Rights Declaration, ‘they freely determine their political status and freely
pursue their economic, social and cultural development, having the right to autonomy or selfgovernment in matters relating to their internal and local affairs’ (Vía Campesina 2009a, 5).
While the ‘right to reject’ might appear to be a novel concept in international law, it corresponds
almost exactly to ‘the right to free, prior, and informed consent’ in the 2007 Indigenous Rights
Declaration. The Peasants’ Rights Declaration would extend to more than a billion additional
human beings in the world’s peasant communities the potential to assert this radical claim of
local autonomy.
Even if the United Nations were to approve not only a Declaration, but a Peasants’ Rights
Convention, there would no doubt be significant obstacles before its provisions could become
legal obligations. Signatory states would have to ratify the Convention according to the rules of
their domestic political systems and, in some cases, enact enabling legislation, both of which are
frequently contentious and prolonged processes. At the time of signing or ratifying a convention,
states also have the right to submit reservations or interpretative statements of understanding that
indicate their views about the applicability of particular provisions. The ability to put forward
reservations assures that more states are likely to accept a treaty, but it may also eviscerate key
30
For a summary of existing international recognition of land rights see South African Human Rights Commission
(2004, 9). For overviews of land reform policies, see Borras and Franco (2010) and Sikor and Müller (2009).
16
protections.31 Finally, human rights conventions typically contain ‘derogation’ provisions that
permit states to suspend their obligations under international law in emergency situations.32
Such emergency circumstances, when states often suspend domestic constitutional guarantees as
well, are typically when the rights of peasants (and others) are in greatest peril.
While the effort to win a Peasants’ Rights Convention may be long and arduous, we
anticipate a number of in-process benefits to transnational agrarian movements along the way.
First, the spaces in international governance carved out by these movements may act as points of
visibility and pressure on governmental and intergovernmental institutions, places where
‘peasants’ rights violations’ are discussed alongside a Peasants’ Rights Convention. Second a
number of forms of leverage come with the adoption of a Declaration, even though such a
document is technically nonbinding. Third, the elaboration of a draft rights document facilitates
the legitimacy, and local government recognition, of such rights even prior to winning a United
Nations imprimatur.
Despite the challenges involved in pushing forward a Peasants’ Rights Convention, there are
also a number of favorable elements in the international political environment. First and
foremost is the above-mentioned support of elements of the UN, and particularly the FAO, the
IFAD and the UNHRC, for food security and the right to food. Second, peasants have inserted
their issues into discussion of the Millennium Development Goals, a broadly supported
international initiative that includes the objective of reducing hunger by one half by 2015.
Peasant advocacy organizations have utilized one salient fact in connecting their agenda to this
hunger reduction goal. In the words of Olivier de Schutter, the UN Special Rapporteur on the
Right to Food,
80 per cent of hungry people live in rural areas and 50 per cent are small-scale farm-holders, and
… these people are especially vulnerable to food insecurity, given the increasing cost of inputs
and the fall in farm incomes. (United Nations 2008, 4)
With this recognition, the entire agenda of peasant movements becomes relevant to the
international commitment to eradicating hunger, including the following concerns, again
summarized by the UN Special Rapporteur:
that access to land, water, seeds and other natural resources is an increasing challenge for poor
producers; that sustainable and gender-sensitive agricultural policies are important tools for
promoting land and agrarian reform, rural credit and insurance, technical assistance and other
associated measures to achieve food security and rural development; and that support by States
for small farmers, fishing communities and local enterprises is a key element for food security
and the provision of the right to food. (United Nations 2008, 4)
Third and finally, a series of internationally recognized crises – the food crisis beginning in
2007, the global financial crisis beginning 2008, and the ecological crisis as highlighted by the
31
France, for example, signed the ICCPR but nonetheless asserted that the article protecting the rights of ethnic,
religious and linguistic minorities to ‘their own culture,… religion, or… language’ contradicted the French
Constitution’s guarantee of ‘equality of all citizens before the law, without distinction of origin, race or religion’
(Burchill 2008, 59).
32
The United Kingdom lodged derogations to its obligations under the ICCPR and the European Human Rights
Court following the 9-11 terrorist attacks on the United States. It argued that it now faced a singular security threat
that required suspending basic rights for individuals suspected of terrorist involvement (Burchill 2008, 62–3).
17
2009 climate change negotiations – all represent arenas in which Vía Campesina and its allies
can push forward their ‘struggle among models’. The deeper and wider hunger that came with
the first two crises has called into question the practical viability for feeding the world of
globalized, export-oriented industrial agriculture. Numerous critics have also found that partial
fault in the food crisis belongs to large-scale biofuel production, which increasingly competes
with food crops for arable land (Vía Campesina 2009, White and Dasgupta 2010). Meanwhile,
Vía Campesina argues that small-scale agriculture offers a superior form of carbon sequestration
by conserving and enriching soils and preventing agriculture-driven deforestation (Vía
Campesina 2009b).
While the Peasants’ Rights Convention campaign has advanced within several UN agencies,
it has also faced a number of major stumbling blocks. The launch of the campaign in 2002
occurred at an unpropitious moment, in the aftermath of the 9-11 terrorist attacks, when leading
specialists argued that ‘the human rights era’ might be ending (Ignatieff 2002). The UN human
rights regime has long included social and economic rights. The expansion of such rights or of
the classes of rights holders, however, faces daunting obstacles in an age when the hegemonic
conceptions of ‘rights’ within the most powerful UN member states are still largely limited to
narrow notions of individual expression and the ‘rights’ of economic actors in the market
(Glasius 2006, Lewis 2007). An additional difficulty is that ‘“exotic” Indians preserving a
“traditional culture” seem more worthy of support than “acculturated” people’ (Gledhill 2003,
215). ‘Peasantness’ has always been better conceived as a political claim than as an analytical
category (Edelman 1999), but to make such a politicized, protean grouping a subject of an
international convention requires not only persuasion and effective framing, but, eventually,
legal clarity based on rigorous classificatory taxonomies (Benhabib 2002, 18). Furthermore,
these difficulties in expanding norms about rights and in establishing the case for ‘peasants’ as a
legally defined cultural group of rights bearers are part of a broader problem of making peasant
voices heard in societies where thousands are abandoning the countryside every day, where in
many regions peasants are viewed skeptically as a result of their participation in predatory
resource wars (Buijtenhuijs 2000, Renner 2002), and where powerful elites and policymakers no
longer view agriculture as the motor force of economic development (Edelman 2008, Handy
2009). Despite these very considerable barriers, proponents of the International Convention on
the Rights of Peasants have recently made notable advances. It remains to be seen how they will
strategize about these obstacles, in addition to how they understand and implement the advances
already obtained within the international human rights regime.
18
Table 1. Rights claimed in 2002 and 2009 draft Declarations on Peasants’ Rights
Rights claimed
Relevant international instruments
Right to a proper living standard 2002
Defining themselves as a ‘people’, without discrimination
against gender, age, religion, culture;
Includes: right to protection, livelihood, food (both as
producers and consumers), health services, sport, electricity,
water, communication, security, social services, education,
housing
Right to life and to an adequate standard of living 2009
Affirming gender equality and the right to own land; to
produce agricultural products, to rear livestock, to hunt and
gather, and to fish in their territories
UDHR standard of living, medical
care, access to food
UNMB freedom from hunger,
violence, oppression, access to water
ICESCR organize, standard of living,
access food, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person,
right to technical support
PA livelihood, water, protection
ILO-10 health insurance for
agricultural laborers
IDR definition of a people who need
to be protected from discrimination
DRD; UDCD; CRC; CEDAW
Right to agrarian resources 2002
Right to own and work their land, as well as the nonproductive state land;
UDHR property rights,
environmental protection
DRD
to clean water and to manage and use the water and forest
resources from their land;
UNMD freedom from hunger, access
to water
to ask for state-support, and right to reject plans for their land
and resources;
UDEHM
to legal protection of land, protection from corporate claims,
and from environmental pollution
Right to land and territory 2009
Right to own land, including nonproductive state land, and to
own the products of their labor; to fight forced eviction;
to state funds for irrigation technologies; to the access, and
community control, of safe water
19
IRD right to get support of the state,
right to protection of economic
institutions, right to land, role in
decision-making process if affects
right
ICESCR pursue economic
development, protection of means of
subsistence, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person,
technical support
UDCD; IFAD; ILO
Table 1. continued
Rights claimed
Relevant international instruments
Right to seed and agriculture 2002
IRD right to protection of economic
institutions
Right to determine their seeds, and reject varieties;
NERLM to enjoy culture
to determine farming systems, right to use and develop local
agricultural knowledge and seed varieties
Right to seed and traditional agricultural knowledge and
practice 2009
Right to determine the varieties of seeds, including the right to
develop and sell their own varieties; to food sovereignty; to
reject plant varieties and the industrial model of agriculture;
to conserve and develop local knowledge in agricultural,
fishing and livestock rearing and to the use of relevant;
facilities
DRD
UNMD freedom from hunger, access
to water
UDEHM
ICESCR pursue economic
development, protection of means of
subsistence, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person
UDCD
FAO
to use their own technologies or those guided by the principle
of protecting human and environmental health
CEDAW
Right for capital and means of agricultural production and
the right to access information and agricultural technology
2002
IRD
Right to obtain funds, capital, and balanced information; and
to be involved in the planning of agriculture;
RC
ICESCR pursue economic
development, protection of means of
subsistence
DRD
to material and tools of agriculture, including irrigation and
transportation, and right to choose where to get aid
UNMD freedom from hunger
Right to information and agriculture technology 2009
UDCD
Right to obtain impartial and balanced information about
capital, market, policies, prices, technology, and national and
international policies;
CEDAW
to obtain adequate information at the national and
international levels on the preservation of genetic resources
Right to means of agricultural production 2009
Right to obtain funds, credit, tools, water transportation,
storing facilities for agricultural production;
to be actively involved in planning the agricultural budget
20
UDEHM
ITPGRFA
Table 1. continued
Rights claimed
Relevant international instruments
Right for freedom in determining price and market for
agricultural production 2002
DRD
to produce and store their agricultural product; to fair markets
where they determine the prices; to fair compensation for
labor;
UNMD
the human and environmental health of future generations;
the right to market products nationally and internationally and
to fair inspections
NERLM to enjoy culture
UDEHM
ICESCR pursue economic
development, protection of means of
subsistence, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person
IRD right to protection of economic
institutions
Freedom to determine price and market for agricultural
production 2009
Right to prioritize agricultural production and the satisfaction
of the family’s basic needs; to develop community-based
commercialization;
to foster traditional local markets, getting beneficial price for
their production and a fair evaluation of their products’ quality
Right for protection of agricultural values 2002
UDHR participation in cultural life
Right to protect, preserve and value culture and to reject
interventions that threaten culture/agricultural practices
UDRME protection of culture
IRD protection of culture
DRD
Right to the protection of agricultural values 2009
ICESCR pursue cultural and social
development
Right to recognize and protect local culture/agricultural
values; to develop and preserve local knowledge and to reject
interventions that threaten local agricultural values;
to be respected for their spirituality as individuals and as
peoples
21
UNMD freedom from hunger
UDEHM; UDCD
NERLM to enjoy culture
Table 1. continued
Rights claimed
Relevant international instruments
Right for biological diversity 2002
UDRME
Right to protect, conserve, develop, maintain and exchange
biological and genetic diversity; to reject any patents on
biological diversity. These rights must be protected by law,
and the peasants have the rights to cancel the intellectual
property rights of their goods and services.
IRD
ILO-10 protection of means of
subsistence, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person
ITPGRFA
Right to biological diversity 2009
Right to protect, preserve, develop, maintain, conserve and
exchange biological and genetic diversity; to reject any
patents on biological diversity, including intellectual property
rights of goods, services, resources, knowledge of the local
community and certification mechanisms transnational
corporations establish.
Local, peasant-run guarantee schemes should be promoted and
protected.
Right for Environmental Preservation 2002
Right to a clean and healthy environment that [peasants] can
preserve using local knowledge;
to reject agricultural policies based on environmental
degradation, and to have lawsuits and get compensation for
environmental damage
Right to preserve the environment 2009
ILO-10 protection of means of
subsistence, protection of destruction
of rights by state, group or person
UNMD freedom from hunger, access
to water
DRD
IRD right to protection of economic
institutions
NERLM to enjoy culture
Right to a clean and healthy environment preserved according
to [peasants’] knowledge;
UDEHM
to reject all forms of exploitation that cause environmental
damage;
PA; CAIPJE
to sue and claim compensation for environmental damage;
to reparation for ecological debt and the historic and current
dispossessions of their territories
22
UDCD
Table 1. continued
Rights claimed
Relevant international instruments
Right for Freedom to Associate 2002
IRD organize and expression of
culture
Right to convene, be protected, organize – including
economically;
NERLM association
UDHR
to public expression of culture, religion, literature and art
Freedom of association, opinion and expression and the
right to have access to justice 2009
ICCPR
ICESCR trade unions and freedom
from unjust imprisonment
IDR
The right is granted through claims, petitions and
mobilizations; right to independent peasants’ organizations,
trade unions, cooperatives; to local customs, languages,
culture, religions, literature and art;
ILO
UDHR
Not to be criminalized for their struggles and to recourse to
peaceful direct action; to a fair justice system, with effective
and non-discriminatory courts and legal aid
Source: Vía Campesina (2009a, 2002), international agreements listed above
Notes:
CAIPJE Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation and Access to Justice in
Environmental Matters 1998
CEDAW Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women New York,
18 December, 1979
CRC Convention on the Rights of the Child, 1989
ICCPR International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966
ICESCR International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 1966
IDR Indigenous Rights Declaration, 2007
ILO-10 International Labor Oganization-10 , Minimum Age (Agriculture) Convention, 1921
ITPGRFA International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, 2002
NERLM Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities, 1992
RC Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemical
and Pesticides in International Trade, 1998
UDCD Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity, 2001
UDEHM Universal Declaration on the Eradication of Hunger and Malnutrition, 1974
UDHR Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948
UNMD United Nations Millennium Declaration, 2000
23
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Marc Edelman is professor of anthropology at the City University of New York Graduate
Center and at Hunter College–CUNY, where he is also chair of the Anthropology Department.
Corresponding author: medelman@hunter.cuny.edu
Carwil James is a doctoral candidate in the CUNY PhD Program in Anthropology. He received
an MPP in environmental and human rights policy from the University of Chicago.
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