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Audacious Africa is a Platform for enabling girls, women and communities to challenge limitations and social inequality that alienate them from full participation in sustainable development. We explore indigenous creativity and knowledge for social solutions that are ecological and sustainable.
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We stand for free exchange and ownership of seeds amongst communities, peasant farmers and fishers! We say no to UPOv intent to monopolise and pass seed patents to multinational companies.
We stand for free exchange and ownership of seeds amongst communities, peasant farmers and fishers! We say no to UPOv intent to monopolise and pass seed patents to multinational companies.
Food, powers us, the procesess through which it is produced lies cultural heritages and stories unimaginable. Local farmers for a long time have against odds ensured food and seed varieties are passed down generations. Now the UPOv is seeking to impose uniformity of seeds! This should worry everybody
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc-HrcSYy52Ec2tleccVf3n2qFgrlCrvR-8IIiE-fApsCrzzA/viewform
DOCS.GOOGLE.COM
Sign-on: Call for global week of action against UPOV 2 - 8 December 2021/ Appel à une semaine mondiale d'action contre l'UPOV2 - 8 décembre/ Llamado a una semana de acción mundial contra UPOV 2 - 8 de diciembre
Without seeds and without peasants, agriculture would not be possible. Ever since farming and livestock rearing began, peasants and farmers have freely developed, shared and preserved millions of different crop varieties, adapted to new and different socio-environment conditions. But today, peasants and farmers are facing extreme threats from the privatisation of seeds by intellectual property laws. In addition, seed marketing laws ban local and indigenous varieties which don’t fit the industrial model, restricting access and circulation. One institution is at the heart of this: the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV). UPOV was initiated in 1961 by a few European countries to allow plant breeders to impose a patent-like intellectual property rights over seeds. This regime is called plant variety protection and trade agreements often require countries to adopt or mimic UPOV’s rules. UPOV requires and promotes uniformity in seeds, and therefore in the food supply. It grants a small group of transnational corporations the means to appropriate and control seeds without taking into account people’s and communities historical socio-cultural relationships with seeds. This serves the industrial food system, which feeds 30% of humanity. But it promotes genetic erosion, economic vulnerability and loss of autonomy for small scale farmers and peasants who feed 70% of the world. Not only do smallholder farmers, producers and fishers feed most of the world, but women in particular are main custodians of seed and life. Often existing under already precarious circumstances, the weight of patriarchy and economic subordination, UPOV adds further to their burden by criminalising their practices. In addition to serving corporate interests, UPOV is therefore anti-women. For the poor living on the margins of urban areas, it is most often women who carry the burden of care for their families, such as providing food. This shows that seed is more than an act of farming; it is social relationships of care and solidarity that are crucial for wider progressive action. UPOV is therefore a direct attack on care, solidarity, community, and on our ability to work together in solidarity for a better future. As an intergovernmental body, UPOV’s sole purpose is to oblige countries to operate laws that privatise seeds worldwide, enabling corporations to capture the world’s farmers who are currently using their own seeds with dignity and for free. Under these laws, companies get the right to extract hefty royalty payments from people and communities that grow or save protected seeds – often at a 10-12% mark-up. Governments especially in the developing countries are often under strong pressure to internalise UPOV into their legal systems either through trade agreements or direct pressure from the seed industry lobbies. When a country become a member of UPOV, it must comply to its strict rules which are regularly revised to protect even more the interests of the seed industry and undermine policy and regulation that protect and guarantee the rights and interests of farmer and peasant communities e.g. by preventing loopholes and making it a crime to save and share seeds. Free exchange of seeds being the basis of community seed management at present and for thousands of years, joining UPOV will be catastrophic as it leads to the criminalisation of farmers and peasants for simply doing their daily practices: saving, breeding and sharing or distributing seeds. It also boosts the concentration of the seed industry. People in many countries call seed laws “Monsanto laws” because they help companies like Monsanto (now Bayer) or Syngenta merge their interests in chemicals, farm technology, GMOs and seeds. There are a few countries, like Venezuela, that have laws that defend peasant seeds, and the freedom to save them and exchange them, as well as peasant life. But right now, even the UN Food Systems Summit, led by the FAO and private entities, is giving UPOV a central role to provide farmers with so-called “improved” seeds. Instead of adopting UPOV-based seed laws, governments should put in place legally binding and discrete measures to recognise and support farmers’ rights and seed systems. Such measures would ensure the right of farmers to save, exchange and sell seed unrestricted by commercial imperatives of transnational corporations. To rise to the challenge of our ecological and social crises, farmers’ rights should not simply be defended, but actively deepened and widened as a core organising principle of our food systems. UPOV-based laws cannot do this, and only seek to support a narrow set of interests, and decreased diversity. Diversity is life, and core to a shared and just ecological future. Sovereignty over seed is a prerequisite and core component of the exercise of rights by family and community farmers and peasants. Protections are needed against patents, seed and plant variety protection laws, digital sequence information and the like which erode the exercise of farmers’ rights. In an already fractured world, UPOV only attempts to further fracture life, seed, community and ecologies. The freedom, right and capacity of communities to save, use and exchange their own seeds are central pillars of people’s Food Sovereignty. To this, we respond with wholeness, because this is the nature of life, and therefore of a just and harmonious future and why we must defend them. After decades of campaigning in different parts of the world, we would like to propose a global week of action against UPOV starting on 2 December 2021, UPOV’s 60th birthday. We extend it to a week of action to include December 3rd, the global Day of Action Against Agri-Chemicals. The purpose would be to draw attention to the role that UPOV plays in privatising seeds and threatening food sovereignty and to call for it to be dismantled. It would allow groups to heighten their resistance to national or regional seed laws, highlight examples of pro-peasant seed legislation, in whatever form they take, and expose the role of free trade agreements in pushing seed laws all over the planet. It could be a week of education and mobilisation, allowing peasants, farmers and allies to stand up in unity to stop UPOV and seed privatisation. How to get involved? - Get informed, join or organise trainings, discussions and debates about UPOV and seed laws in your communities/countries. Resources to check out: UPOV the great seed robbery; how UPOV is misleading developing countries; UPOV animation - Join struggles against UPOV and related laws currently taking place at national level (e.g. Nigeria, Ghana, Japan, Thailand). Contact groups in your country/region and join forces. - Support movements against FTAs that are promoting UPOV and other seed laws that criminalise peasant seeds , call for pro-peasant seed legislation. - Participate in the global week of action in December 2021 which includes the global day of action against UPOV on Dec 2 and the global day of action against agrochemicals on Dec 3. Launched on 30 July 2021 by: Convenors (in alphabetical order): African Centre for Biodiversity Alianza Biodiversidad APBREBES Colectivo de Semillas de América Latina COPAGEN ETC Friends of the Earth International GRAIN La Via Campesina Stop Golden Rice Network Follow this link for the call to action in English/ French and Spanish Suivez ce lien pour l'appel à l'action en anglais/français et espagnol Siga este enlace para ver el llamamiento a la acción en inglés/francés y español Para respaldar esta declaración y recibir actualizaciones, haga clic aquí. https://forms.gle/oozYAAtNCj4DgC7dA https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQbEn93xvvBvm1p__N4n3B0cNt6RDoR7_g9uOd3ZXoYsq47sI0_FAa55-FN86Njg20NfrX_DA_wngLC/pub
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  • Today Monday 3rd April 2023 goes down in the history of Audacious. Receiving a feed back that reads in part "we are pleased to inform you"

    Pumped is an inderstatement. Looking forward to this journey
    Today Monday 3rd April 2023 goes down in the history of Audacious. Receiving a feed back that reads in part "we are pleased to inform you" Pumped is an inderstatement. Looking forward to this journey
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    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5590 Views 0 önizleme
  • On 22nd October 2021, the Audacious Africa team will have a foodly bubbly conversation about indegenous seeds with children of Shilo International Homeschool. We will talk about how in many ways- children are as: vibrant, the hope of the future, diverse, testimonies of resilience of diverse DNAs and a beautiful result of complex cultural social co existences.
    #Protect the uniqueness of our children, their diversity
    #protect our seeds, our hope for a beautiful healthy future.

    We cant wait.
    On 22nd October 2021, the Audacious Africa team will have a foodly bubbly conversation about indegenous seeds with children of Shilo International Homeschool. We will talk about how in many ways- children are as: vibrant, the hope of the future, diverse, testimonies of resilience of diverse DNAs and a beautiful result of complex cultural social co existences. #Protect the uniqueness of our children, their diversity #protect our seeds, our hope for a beautiful healthy future. We cant wait.
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  • We stand for free exchange and ownership of seeds amongst communities, peasant farmers and fishers! We say no to UPOv intent to monopolise and pass seed patents to multinational companies.
    We stand for free exchange and ownership of seeds amongst communities, peasant farmers and fishers! We say no to UPOv intent to monopolise and pass seed patents to multinational companies.
    Food, powers us, the procesess through which it is produced lies cultural heritages and stories unimaginable. Local farmers for a long time have against odds ensured food and seed varieties are passed down generations. Now the UPOv is seeking to impose uniformity of seeds! This should worry everybody
    https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc-HrcSYy52Ec2tleccVf3n2qFgrlCrvR-8IIiE-fApsCrzzA/viewform
    DOCS.GOOGLE.COM
    Sign-on: Call for global week of action against UPOV 2 - 8 December 2021/ Appel à une semaine mondiale d'action contre l'UPOV2 - 8 décembre/ Llamado a una semana de acción mundial contra UPOV 2 - 8 de diciembre
    Without seeds and without peasants, agriculture would not be possible. Ever since farming and livestock rearing began, peasants and farmers have freely developed, shared and preserved millions of different crop varieties, adapted to new and different socio-environment conditions. But today, peasants and farmers are facing extreme threats from the privatisation of seeds by intellectual property laws. In addition, seed marketing laws ban local and indigenous varieties which don’t fit the industrial model, restricting access and circulation. One institution is at the heart of this: the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV). UPOV was initiated in 1961 by a few European countries to allow plant breeders to impose a patent-like intellectual property rights over seeds. This regime is called plant variety protection and trade agreements often require countries to adopt or mimic UPOV’s rules. UPOV requires and promotes uniformity in seeds, and therefore in the food supply. It grants a small group of transnational corporations the means to appropriate and control seeds without taking into account people’s and communities historical socio-cultural relationships with seeds. This serves the industrial food system, which feeds 30% of humanity. But it promotes genetic erosion, economic vulnerability and loss of autonomy for small scale farmers and peasants who feed 70% of the world. Not only do smallholder farmers, producers and fishers feed most of the world, but women in particular are main custodians of seed and life. Often existing under already precarious circumstances, the weight of patriarchy and economic subordination, UPOV adds further to their burden by criminalising their practices. In addition to serving corporate interests, UPOV is therefore anti-women. For the poor living on the margins of urban areas, it is most often women who carry the burden of care for their families, such as providing food. This shows that seed is more than an act of farming; it is social relationships of care and solidarity that are crucial for wider progressive action. UPOV is therefore a direct attack on care, solidarity, community, and on our ability to work together in solidarity for a better future. As an intergovernmental body, UPOV’s sole purpose is to oblige countries to operate laws that privatise seeds worldwide, enabling corporations to capture the world’s farmers who are currently using their own seeds with dignity and for free. Under these laws, companies get the right to extract hefty royalty payments from people and communities that grow or save protected seeds – often at a 10-12% mark-up. Governments especially in the developing countries are often under strong pressure to internalise UPOV into their legal systems either through trade agreements or direct pressure from the seed industry lobbies. When a country become a member of UPOV, it must comply to its strict rules which are regularly revised to protect even more the interests of the seed industry and undermine policy and regulation that protect and guarantee the rights and interests of farmer and peasant communities e.g. by preventing loopholes and making it a crime to save and share seeds. Free exchange of seeds being the basis of community seed management at present and for thousands of years, joining UPOV will be catastrophic as it leads to the criminalisation of farmers and peasants for simply doing their daily practices: saving, breeding and sharing or distributing seeds. It also boosts the concentration of the seed industry. People in many countries call seed laws “Monsanto laws” because they help companies like Monsanto (now Bayer) or Syngenta merge their interests in chemicals, farm technology, GMOs and seeds. There are a few countries, like Venezuela, that have laws that defend peasant seeds, and the freedom to save them and exchange them, as well as peasant life. But right now, even the UN Food Systems Summit, led by the FAO and private entities, is giving UPOV a central role to provide farmers with so-called “improved” seeds. Instead of adopting UPOV-based seed laws, governments should put in place legally binding and discrete measures to recognise and support farmers’ rights and seed systems. Such measures would ensure the right of farmers to save, exchange and sell seed unrestricted by commercial imperatives of transnational corporations. To rise to the challenge of our ecological and social crises, farmers’ rights should not simply be defended, but actively deepened and widened as a core organising principle of our food systems. UPOV-based laws cannot do this, and only seek to support a narrow set of interests, and decreased diversity. Diversity is life, and core to a shared and just ecological future. Sovereignty over seed is a prerequisite and core component of the exercise of rights by family and community farmers and peasants. Protections are needed against patents, seed and plant variety protection laws, digital sequence information and the like which erode the exercise of farmers’ rights. In an already fractured world, UPOV only attempts to further fracture life, seed, community and ecologies. The freedom, right and capacity of communities to save, use and exchange their own seeds are central pillars of people’s Food Sovereignty. To this, we respond with wholeness, because this is the nature of life, and therefore of a just and harmonious future and why we must defend them. After decades of campaigning in different parts of the world, we would like to propose a global week of action against UPOV starting on 2 December 2021, UPOV’s 60th birthday. We extend it to a week of action to include December 3rd, the global Day of Action Against Agri-Chemicals. The purpose would be to draw attention to the role that UPOV plays in privatising seeds and threatening food sovereignty and to call for it to be dismantled. It would allow groups to heighten their resistance to national or regional seed laws, highlight examples of pro-peasant seed legislation, in whatever form they take, and expose the role of free trade agreements in pushing seed laws all over the planet. It could be a week of education and mobilisation, allowing peasants, farmers and allies to stand up in unity to stop UPOV and seed privatisation. How to get involved? - Get informed, join or organise trainings, discussions and debates about UPOV and seed laws in your communities/countries. Resources to check out: UPOV the great seed robbery; how UPOV is misleading developing countries; UPOV animation - Join struggles against UPOV and related laws currently taking place at national level (e.g. Nigeria, Ghana, Japan, Thailand). Contact groups in your country/region and join forces. - Support movements against FTAs that are promoting UPOV and other seed laws that criminalise peasant seeds , call for pro-peasant seed legislation. - Participate in the global week of action in December 2021 which includes the global day of action against UPOV on Dec 2 and the global day of action against agrochemicals on Dec 3. Launched on 30 July 2021 by: Convenors (in alphabetical order): African Centre for Biodiversity Alianza Biodiversidad APBREBES Colectivo de Semillas de América Latina COPAGEN ETC Friends of the Earth International GRAIN La Via Campesina Stop Golden Rice Network Follow this link for the call to action in English/ French and Spanish Suivez ce lien pour l'appel à l'action en anglais/français et espagnol Siga este enlace para ver el llamamiento a la acción en inglés/francés y español Para respaldar esta declaración y recibir actualizaciones, haga clic aquí. https://forms.gle/oozYAAtNCj4DgC7dA https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQbEn93xvvBvm1p__N4n3B0cNt6RDoR7_g9uOd3ZXoYsq47sI0_FAa55-FN86Njg20NfrX_DA_wngLC/pub
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  • Here is why demilitarization of conservation needs to be interrogated, who protects, preserves their habitat than the people for whom that habitat is all they know, their source of identity, connection, life, history, food, hopes and dreams?
    Without indigenous people, conservation and protection of lands and resources is but a myth.

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/biodiversitys-greatest-protectors-need-protection/
    Here is why demilitarization of conservation needs to be interrogated, who protects, preserves their habitat than the people for whom that habitat is all they know, their source of identity, connection, life, history, food, hopes and dreams? Without indigenous people, conservation and protection of lands and resources is but a myth. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/biodiversitys-greatest-protectors-need-protection/
    WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
    Biodiversity’s Greatest Protectors Need Protection
    Indigenous peoples have been conserving ecosystems for millennia. Now the developed world wants to evict them
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  • https://www.facebook.com/groups/904253430508472/permalink/904254113841737/
    https://www.facebook.com/groups/904253430508472/permalink/904254113841737/
    NO to UPOV : The freedom and right of communities to save, use and exchange their seeds are central pillars of people’s Food Sovereignty
    The freedom and right of communities to save, use and exchange their seeds are central pillars of people’s Food Sovereignty. But today, peasants and farmers face extreme threats from the...
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    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 1662 Views 0 önizleme
  • At the heart of our mindset change organising is what we eat. Its not enough to know that you are eating healthy- but how that food was grown. Beware of harmful herbicides to our immunue system like glyphosate. https://sustainablepulse.com/2020/05/13/glyphosate-overuse-leads-to-serious-immune-system-concerns/#.YTM132mEYzR
    At the heart of our mindset change organising is what we eat. Its not enough to know that you are eating healthy- but how that food was grown. Beware of harmful herbicides to our immunue system like glyphosate. https://sustainablepulse.com/2020/05/13/glyphosate-overuse-leads-to-serious-immune-system-concerns/#.YTM132mEYzR
    SUSTAINABLEPULSE.COM
    Glyphosate Overuse Leads to Serious Immune System Concerns
    In a time when the COVID-19 pandemic is dominating the global psyche, it is of course important to delve deeper into the background reasons for the
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  • https://youtu.be/WZ1xc491mnU
    This food system based on multinational companies, private sector can not provide solutions for sustained availability of diverse nutritious foods. So we must challenge it.
    https://youtu.be/WZ1xc491mnU This food system based on multinational companies, private sector can not provide solutions for sustained availability of diverse nutritious foods. So we must challenge it.
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  • https://foodtank.com/news/2021/08/african-faith-leaders-call-on-the-bill-melinda-gates-foundation/amp/?__twitter_impression=true
    " promoting failing and harmful high-input Green Revolution programs, such as the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)."
    We cant agree more
    https://foodtank.com/news/2021/08/african-faith-leaders-call-on-the-bill-melinda-gates-foundation/amp/?__twitter_impression=true " promoting failing and harmful high-input Green Revolution programs, such as the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)." We cant agree more
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    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 1718 Views 0 önizleme
  • http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/1412711/icode/
    Sustainability of healthy, nutritious foods for all.
    http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/1412711/icode/ Sustainability of healthy, nutritious foods for all.
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    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 1707 Views 0 önizleme
  • https://nilechronicles.com/ugandan-food-our-blood-life-and-identity
    https://nilechronicles.com/ugandan-food-our-blood-life-and-identity
    NILECHRONICLES.COM
    Ugandan food: Our blood, life and identity
    Ugandan food: Our blood, life and identity. For as long as history can remember, Uganda’s diversity in food and cuisine has been her pride.
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