Peace and Collaborative Development Network

Building Bridges, Networks and Expertise Across Sectors

Fiona Macaulay
  • Female
  • Bradford
  • United Kingdom
  • I am Senior Lecturer in Development…
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What motivated you (or your organization) to become involved in peace and conflict resolution?
a commitment to women's rights and social justice
Please feel free to provide a short bio about yourself or the work of your organization (no more than 3 paragraphs)
My research and teaching concentrates on gender and on criminal justice, looking at the interface of civil society and the state, public policy and political structures.

I also coordinate a youth education programme called PeaceJam www.peacejam.org.uk
Please list the countries and/or regions in which you (or your organization) have direct and significant expertise
Brazil: Chile; Latin America
What is your current country of residence (or location of your organization)?
UK
What is your current job (and organization) and/or where and what field are you studying?
I am Senior Lecturer in Development in the Peace Studies Department, University of Bradford.
What is your personal or organizational website?
http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/peace/staff/academic/macaulay_f/
Which are your primary sectoral areas of expertise (or the primary sectoral areas of your organization) ?
Gender, Civil Society
Which are your primary skills areas(or the primary skill areas of your organization)?
Research
What are some of your current areas of research (if any)?
community involvement in the criminal justice system in Brazil, especially in community prisons run by NGOs in partnership with the state
If appropriate feel free to list several of your (or your organization's) publications
Gender Politics in Brazil and Chile: the role of political parties in local and national policy-making, Palgrave/St Antony's, London, 2006

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At 11:57am on October 16, 2008, Rene Wadlow said…
Dear Colleague, I was a friend of Adam Curle when the Bradford program was just being set up. I am sure that it has grown. I was wondering if there has been a study of what the peace study students are doing now. I had written recently a piece on peace teams and the need to be able to call up people quickly when there is a negative turn of events, which seems to be the case these days in the Mosul area of Iraq. I'll send you my piece later. Since this is World Food Day, I thought I would share this article with you. Best wishes, Rene Wadlow


16 October — World Food Day — The Three Fs

Rene Wadlow

“determined to promote the common welfare by furthering separate and collective action for the purpose of raising levels of nutrition and standards of living”
Preamble of the FAO Constitution


The current financial crisis joins those of food and fuel to challenge the world economy. The three crises are inter-related and impact each other. Paying hundreds of billions of dollars to rescue the world’s financial industry looks likely to cut both humanitarian aid and development spending. The price of oil has dropped but is still high and is a drain on the funds of developing countries.

Foreign development issues may be the first victims of the financial crisis as government officials focus on domestic issues, especially if there is the predicted slowdown in the economy and a rise in unemployment in North America and Europe.

At a recent funding meeting in Geneva, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Antonio Guterres recognized that the financial crisis would raise challenges for those who have traditionally financed UNHCR programs. “At the same time, I must point out that the resources required to support the 31 million people we care for are very modest indeed when compared to the sums being spent to bring stability to the international financial system. It would be tragic if the funds available to the humanitarian community were to decline at the very time when demands upon us are increasingly so dramatically.”

Yet the decline in governmental aid to the developing world is probably inevitable. Thus an emphasis must be placed on creating a world food policy which draws upon improving local self-reliance while not creating nationalistic policies which harm neighbours. Food is a key aspect of deep structural issues in the world society and thus must be seen in a wholistic framework.

Jean Ping, the chairman of the African Union Commission noted recently that “The sharp increase in basic food prices has had a particularly negative effect on African countries. In the medium and long term, the Commission proposes measures to regulate speculation, the sharing of public cereal stocks, strengthening the financing of imports and reliable food aid, promoting investment in social protection and increased investment to boost agricultural production.” The African Union has 53 state-members with some 750 million people, over half of which are in what is now called “the bottom billion” — people living on $1.25 a day or less. While there is something artificial in poverty lines based on buying-power, such poverty statistics give an indication of the challenges faced.

While constant improvements in technology, mechanization, plant breeding and farm chemicals have steadily increased food production per acre in much of the world, African food production per acre has stagnated, and in some areas has gone down. Likewise, the portion of development assistance in Africa dedicated to agriculture has declined from 15 per cent in the 1980s to 4 per cent in 2006.

Thus the first need in Africa is to develop the local economies: Currently, poverty, lack of adapted technology, population pressure on ecologically fragile areas, a growth of urban slums due to rapid rural to urban migration is the lot of many Sub-Saharan African countries.

Increased action to improve rural life needs to be taken quickly. As the recent UN-sponsored Millennium Ecosystem Assessment notes “Human activity is putting such strain on the natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet’s ecosystem to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted. It is becoming ever more apparent that human society has a rapidly shrinking window of opportunity to alter its path.”

World Food Day needs to be marked by a sharper analysis of the causes of rural stagnation and a renewed dedication to cooperative action.

Rene Wadlow, Representative to the UN, Geneva, Association of World Citizens
 
 

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