A/RES/71/191
The right to food
12. Also calls upon all States and, where appropriate, relevant international
organizations to implement policies and programmes to reduce and eliminate
preventable mortality and morbidity, as a result of malnutrition, of children under
5 years of age, and in this regard urges States to disseminate the technical guidance
prepared by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights,
in collaboration with the World Health Organization 13 and to apply it, as
appropriate, in the design, implementation, evaluation and monitoring of laws,
policies, programmes, budgets and mechanisms for remedy and redress aimed at
eliminating preventable mortality and morbidity of children under 5 years of age;
13. Encourages all States to take steps, with a view to progressively
achieving the full realization of the right to food, including steps to promote the
conditions for everyone to be free from hunger and, as soon as possible, to enjoy
fully the right to food, and to create and adopt national plans to combat hunger;
14. Recognizes the advances reached through South-South cooperation in
developing countries and regions in connection with food security and the
development of agricultural production for the full realization of the right to food;
15. Stresses that improving access to productive resources and public
investment in rural development is essential for eradicating hunger and poverty, in
particular in developing countries, including through the promotion of investment,
including private investment, in appropriate small-scale irrigation and water
management technologies in order to reduce vulnerability to droughts and to tackle
water scarcity;
16. Recognizes the critical contribution made by the fisheries sector to the
realization of the right to food and to food security and the contribution of smallscale fishers to the local food security of coastal communities;
17. Also recognizes that 70 per cent of hungry people live in rural areas,
where nearly half a billion family farmers are located, and tha t these people are
especially vulnerable to food insecurity given the increasing cost of inputs and the
fall in farm incomes; 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, including through the
facilitation of access for their products to national and international markets and
empowerment of small producers, particularly women, in value chains, is a key
element for food security and the provision of the right to food;
18. Stresses the importance of fighting hunger in rural areas, including
through national efforts supported by international partnerships to stop
desertification and land degradation and through investments and public policies
that are specifically appropriate to the risk of drylands, and in this regard calls for
the full implementation of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Deser tification,
Particularly in Africa; 14
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13
A/HRC/27/31; see also Human Rights Council resolution 33/11 (see Official Records of the General
Assembly, Seventy-first Session, Supplement No. 53A and corrigendum (A/71/53/Add.1 and Corr.1),
chap. II).
14
United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1954, No. 33480.
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