"In Global Food Security Governance , Jessica Duncan provides a timely and thoughtful analysis of the recent reform of the Committee on World Food Security and its evolving role in international policy-making on issues of hunger and nutrition. Both empirically rich and theoretically grounded, the book highlights the central role of civil society in reshaping food security governance and assesses the challenges facing the CFS as its work moves forward." - Jennifer Clapp, Canada Research Chair in Global Food Security and Sustainability, University of Waterloo, Canada. "The Committee on World Food Security inaugurates a new breed of global governance: one in which civil society co-design institutions with governments. This is a superb assessment of this transformative moment." - Olivier De Schutter, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to food (2008-2014). "The inadequacies of the world's food system became only too clear when the banking crisis unfolded in 2007. Prices went volati≤ hunger rose; politicians floundered.
In this book, Jessica Duncan gives a wonderful account of the pressures in, on and around the UN's Committee on Food Security, reformed as a result. The account she gives us both celebrates democratic attempts to make the food system more accountable, and points to tensions which remain. It's a great read with sober messages." - Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy, Centre for Food Policy, City University London , UK. "With global food security emerging as one of the issues of the twenty-first century it is essential that obstacles to improved food access be identified and addressed. In her timely and engaging account of the Committee on World Food Security, Jessica Duncan reveals how powerful global actors are undermining the Committee's attempts to develop and pursue progressive policies aimed at assisting the world's hungry. Importantly, she also demonstrates how civil society is confronting global neoliberalism and - through the Committee on World Food Security - is helping to create a new framework for improved food security governance. This illuminating and very well-documented book is a must-read for those who are hoping for, and working toward, a fairer, more food-secure world.
" - Geoffrey Lawrence, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, The University of Queensland, Australia and President of the International Rural Sociology Association.