• This book explores connections between activist debates about food sovereignty and academic debates about alternative food networks. (routledge.com)
  • Video Explainer: What is Food Sovereignty? (viacampesina.org)
  • We, La Via Campesina, are an international peasants' movement who have come together with other allies from around the world to strengthen a global effort toward Food sovereignty. (viacampesina.org)
  • That is why we have come together, to defend our diverse ways of life that exist in our rural areas, and protect our people's food sovereignty. (viacampesina.org)
  • Food Sovereignty is the right of people everywhere to produce food locally and sustainably through agroecological methods that respect the climatic, cultural and geographical context of each region. (viacampesina.org)
  • Food Sovereignty defends our past, present and future generations, and is an alternative to a destructive and harmful industrial food system.It prioritises local trade and markets, which empower peasant agriculture, food production, distribution and consumption based on environmental, social and economic sustainability. (viacampesina.org)
  • It ensures our right to use and manage our own lands, territories, waters, seeds, livestock and biodiversity.Most importantly, Food Sovereignty gives us the power to preserve and grow our food producing knowledge and capacities worldwide. (viacampesina.org)
  • And finally, recognise and implement food sovereignty as a fundamental human right. (viacampesina.org)
  • Over the last two decades, our idea of Food Sovereignty started to germinate and grow. (viacampesina.org)
  • Today, several institutions such as the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), the Committee on World Food Security (CFS), social movements, civil society, trade unions and several national governments (including those of Nepal, Mali, Bolivia and Ecuador) endorse Food Sovereignty as a central pillar in policymaking around food and agriculture. (viacampesina.org)
  • Now is the time for food sovereignty! (viacampesina.org)
  • LUCSUS PhD student Ronald Byaruhanga studies how collective action through farmer groups can be used as a vehicle for food sovereignty in Uganda. (lu.se)
  • However, my personal interest lies in understanding how collective action through farmer groups can be used as a vehicle for food sovereignty in Uganda. (lu.se)
  • For almost three decades, food sovereignty has dominated scientific literature as a possible alternative to the neoliberal agricultural model. (lu.se)
  • IDC has predicted that the idea of digital sovereignty will gain greater traction in the coming years. (idc.com)
  • IDC's Digital Sovereignty CIS will track supply and demand for sovereign solutions, resulting in market sizing data at global, regional, and individual market levels, and analyze drivers and developments in terms of vendors, product offerings, and interest from vertical industry sectors. (idc.com)
  • What is digital sovereignty and why is it relevant as part of a multicloud strategy? (idc.com)
  • There are four important ways in which Europe can begin to recover digital sovereignty and form a basis for its digital economy to grow. (oliverwyman.com)
  • Companies, organizations and governments around the globe face urgent questions surrounding their own technological and digital sovereignty. (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • Definition: What is digital sovereignty? (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • Digital sovereignty is the ability and the opportunities for individuals and institutions to independently play their own role in the digital world in a safe and self-determined manner. (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • In a brilliant comparative study of law and imperialism, Lisa Ford argues that modern settler sovereignty emerged when settlers in North America and Australia defined indigenous theft and violence as crime. (harvard.edu)
  • Ford traces the emergence of modern settler sovereignty in everyday contests between settlers and indigenous people in early national Georgia and the colony of New South Wales. (harvard.edu)
  • In Georgia, New South Wales, and elsewhere, settler sovereignty emerged when, at the same time in history, settlers rejected legal pluralism and moved to control or remove indigenous peoples. (harvard.edu)
  • Lisa Ford is the author of the prizewinning Settler Sovereignty: Jurisdiction and Indigenous People in America and Australia, 1788-1836 and coauthor of Rage for Order: The British Empire and the Origins of International Law, 1800-1850 . (harvard.edu)
  • And Chasinghorse, an Indigenous model and activist known for using her platform to support sovereignty and sustainability, was an ideal subject. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • Faye Ginsberg's reading in the second week of this course prompted me to want to dig a little deeper into the topic of indigenous sovereignty in Canadian media. (ubc.ca)
  • Balancing openness with Indigenous data sovereignty: An opportunity to leave no one behind in the journey to sequence all of life. (bvsalud.org)
  • Clarity demands a distinction between a nation's de jure sovereignty and its de facto autonomy . (brookings.edu)
  • De jure sovereignty cannot guarantee that a nation will be able, de facto, to prevent external influences from shaping events and decisions taken within its borders. (brookings.edu)
  • If foreigners were to use coercion or military force to abrogate a nation's de jure sovereignty (and its de facto autonomy), that would of course be adverse. (brookings.edu)
  • But reductions in de jure sovereignty that improve welfare for the residents of a nation are an entirely different matter. (brookings.edu)
  • If domestic political authorities willingly enter into welfare-enhancing arrangements that supersede de jure sovereignty, such departures are not "violations. (brookings.edu)
  • De jure sovereignty is frequently irrelevant. (brookings.edu)
  • The United States does not take a position on Taiwan's sovereignty under Washington's "One China" policy, the State Department said Monday. (voanews.com)
  • At least Finland during the Cold War maintained its status as a nation, whereas Ma's policies are putting Taiwan's sovereignty in imminent danger. (taipeitimes.com)
  • The journalists had been invited to a media briefing on the one-year anniversary of his appointment, at 20 Seaview Avenue, Kingston, to provide an update on a number of topics, including China-Jamaica relations, China's economic situation, the Belt and Road cooperation, and the hot topic of Taiwan's sovereignty. (jamaica-gleaner.com)
  • Qatar is ready for talks to resolve the diplomatic crisis with the Saudi-led bloc so long as the country's sovereignty is respected and any deal is binding on all, His Highness the Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani said on Friday. (gulf-times.com)
  • de facto sovereignty refers to the factual ability to do so. (wikipedia.org)
  • This can become an issue of special concern upon the failure of the usual expectation that de jure and de facto sovereignty exist at the place and time of concern, and reside within the same organization. (wikipedia.org)
  • According to Immanuel Wallerstein, another fundamental feature of sovereignty is that it is a claim that must be recognized if it is to have any meaning: Sovereignty is a hypothetical trade, in which two potentially (or really) conflicting sides, respecting de facto realities of power, exchange such recognitions as their least costly strategy. (wikipedia.org)
  • He is interested in state institutions, de facto sovereignty of rebel movements and public authority. (lu.se)
  • If America opts not to respect the principle of national sovereignty, it discourages other world powers from doing so and undermines state sovereignty the world over. (baltimoresun.com)
  • His statement is seen as infringing on the national sovereignty of South Korea. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • This legal pluralism, however, was under stress as new, global statecraft linked sovereignty to the exercise of perfect territorial jurisdiction. (harvard.edu)
  • Facing yet another confrontation with Putin after butting heads with him over Syria, Obama said any violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity would be 'deeply destabilizing. (debka.com)
  • China's sovereignty and territorial integrity has never been split. (voanews.com)
  • There are two additional components of sovereignty that should be discussed, empirical sovereignty and juridical sovereignty. (wikipedia.org)
  • Juridical sovereignty emphasizes the importance of other states recognizing the rights of a state to exercise their control freely with little interference. (wikipedia.org)
  • For a while, the United Nations highly valued juridical sovereignty and attempted to reinforce its principle often. (wikipedia.org)
  • Oracle's new EU Sovereign Cloud is now open, and it will help private and public sector organizations across the European Union gain more control over data privacy and sovereignty requirements. (oracle.com)
  • Available for customers in all 27 member states of the EU and globally, Oracle EU Sovereign Cloud offers 100+ cloud services available in Oracle's public cloud with no premium fees for the sovereignty capabilities, and with the same SLAs on performance, management, and availability. (oracle.com)
  • By offering the services and capabilities of Oracle's public cloud, Oracle EU Sovereign Cloud enables public sector organizations to use AI infrastructure in a cloud that aligns with EU data residency and sovereignty requirements. (oracle.com)
  • Sovereignty entails hierarchy within the state, as well as external autonomy for states. (wikipedia.org)
  • 1. The wording of the Trump Deal intentionally strips "sovereignty " of some of its meaning such that even acceptance of the concept of the Deal doesn't necessarily mean acceptance of anything more than autonomy. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • Although some recent literature has touched this possibility―most notably the excellent discussion of Schmitt's "institutionalism" by Jens Meierhenrich―this essay argues that Schmitt's turn to sovereignty in jurisprudence during World War II, because it emphasizes sovereignty, is not one in a series of institutional paradigms (Meierhenrich, 2016) . (scirp.org)
  • In META, AP, and North America, while the focus is largely on data sovereignty, as cloud usage continues to grow and markets mature, broader discussions about sovereignty and in particular cloud sovereignty will begin to evolve. (idc.com)
  • Customers with data and applications that are sensitive, regulated, or of strategic regional importance, as well as workloads that fall under EU guidelines and requirements for sovereignty and data privacy, such as the general data protection regulation (GDPR), can now move to the cloud. (oracle.com)
  • However, as organisations transfer more workloads and data to the cloud, many have recognised the need to remain compliant with the plethora of data sovereignty regulations that exist across the globe. (computerweekly.com)
  • The advent of cloud has forced data sovereignty to centre stage as its dispersed nature has broken down many of the traditional geopolitical barriers limiting the storage of data across borders. (computerweekly.com)
  • The transformation to multi-cloud - where enterprises rely on not just one, but multiple cloud service providers - delivers benefits to enterprises but also serves to increase the risk that data could extend - knowingly or not - into different regions with different data sovereignty laws. (computerweekly.com)
  • But sovereignty concerns a state's internal as well as international relations, and Schmitt came to argue in the 1940s that an authoritative and sovereign form of international law might offer standards for unifying states within an international community, much as the Catholic Church once provided an intra-state source of law and authority. (scirp.org)
  • On August 31, 2020, then-Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs David Stilwell told an audience at a Washington think tank that "the United States has not agreed to take any position regarding sovereignty over Taiwan" and it is important to review history because "Beijing has a habit of distorting it. (voanews.com)
  • Sovereignty was and remains at the heart of the Brexit project. (ssrn.com)
  • British debate about exit from the European Union ("Brexit") has been dominated by yearning for "restoring U.K. sovereignty. (brookings.edu)
  • This occurred, not at the moment of settlement or federation, but in the second quarter of the nineteenth century when notions of statehood, sovereignty, empire, and civilization were in rapid, global flux. (harvard.edu)
  • Her focus is the 'legal trinity' of classic nation statehood-sovereignty, jurisdiction, and territory. (harvard.edu)
  • James Dobson, who has advised a long list of presidents on faith issues and founded the James Dobson Family Institute and FamilyTalk on radio, is warning America about Joe Biden's plan to destroy the nation's sovereignty. (wnd.com)
  • Providing insights into previously unexplored parallels between information privacy and information sovereignty, it examines cross-border discovery, cybersecurity and cyber-defence operations, and legal regimes for cross-border data transfers, encompassing practical discussions from a fresh perspective. (e-elgar.com)
  • Medieval Sovereignty examines the idea of sovereignty in the Middle Ages and asks if it can be considered a fundamental element of medieval constitutional order. (eburon.nl)
  • Quannah Rose Chasinghorse, a model who advocates for Native sovereignty, stands in front of West Mitten Butte, located in a Diné (Navajo) tribal park in Arizona. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • Economic, social, and cultural interrelationships intentionally erode sovereignty. (brookings.edu)
  • Sovereignty or a sovereignty construct like a nation state can generally be defined as supreme authority. (wikipedia.org)
  • In any state, sovereignty is assigned to the person, body or institution that has the ultimate authority over other people in order to establish a law or change existing laws. (wikipedia.org)
  • In international law, sovereignty is the exercise of power by a state. (wikipedia.org)
  • The current notion of state sovereignty contains four aspects: territory, population, authority and recognition. (wikipedia.org)
  • Empirical sovereignty deals with the legitimacy of who is in control of a state and the legitimacy of how they exercise their power. (wikipedia.org)
  • Greece on Monday traded sovereignty for a European bailout, agreeing to hand over control of state assets to an independent external trust fund that will privatize them. (thedailybeast.com)
  • This pioneering state-of the-art assessment of information law and legal theory is a vital resource for students, academics, policy-makers and practitioners alike, seeking a guide to the phenomena of information, sovereignty and privacy. (e-elgar.com)
  • Carl Schmitt's early proposal to better unify the liberal state, by locating sovereignty in the executive, proved a disaster with the National Socialist regime. (scirp.org)
  • If the constitutional state were disabled by disunity, he was committed to recovering a theoretical and institutional basis for sovereignty and authority. (scirp.org)
  • While Washington has not agreed to take any position regarding sovereignty over Taiwan, Monday's statement from the State Department is a rare public comment. (voanews.com)
  • We don't take a position on sovereignty, but the policy that has been at the crux of our approach to Taiwan since 1979 remains in effect today," said State Department spokesperson Ned Price during Monday's briefing. (voanews.com)
  • Any solution to the crisis must be based on two principles: first, the solution should be within the framework of respect for the sovereignty and will of each State. (gulf-times.com)
  • Andersson, R 2015, The green state and the prospects of greening sovereignty . (lu.se)
  • In his most recent book chapter, "The Perfect Storm: Sovereignty Games and the Law and Politics of Boat Migration", Research Director and Professor Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen argues that the current inability to adequately address the plight of boat migrants may perhaps best be understood as an instance of "the perfect storm", i.e. a confluence of circumstances that in their sum aggravate a given state of affairs dramatically. (lu.se)
  • The global governance of AIDS is dependent for its success on the concerted efforts of actors from both local and global levels, thus challenging the current international organization based on state sovereignty. (lu.se)
  • With the advent of AIDS, the hegemony of intergovernmentally run public-health programs was challenged by counterhegemonic groups intent on broadening both the basis of global policymaking in state sovereignty and the narrow focus on public health for AIDS control and prevention. (lu.se)
  • The People's Republic of China (PRC) claims sovereignty over Taiwan. (voanews.com)
  • The People's Republic of China's Ambassador to Jamaica, His Excellency Chen Daojiang, gave notice on Tuesday that his country will never again cede sovereignty of Taiwan, declaring that this issue is an internal one that must be resolved by the Chinese. (jamaica-gleaner.com)
  • On October 25, the Chinese government announced that it was resuming the exercise of sovereignty over Taiwan, and the ceremony to accept Japan's surrender in Taiwan Province of the China war theatre of the Allied Powers was held in Taibei (Taipei). (jamaica-gleaner.com)
  • For example, Jackson and Rosberg explain how the sovereignty and survival of African states were more largely influenced by legal recognition rather than material aid. (wikipedia.org)
  • Nonetheless, despite widespread attention to "decisionism" in Schmitt's treatment of law, it is perplexing that sovereignty has largely dropped out of the analysis. (scirp.org)
  • In Proverbs, we read that God's sovereignty extends even to seemingly incidental things: 'The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord' (Prov. (ligonier.org)
  • What is data residency versus data sovereignty? (vmware.com)
  • Data sovereignty refers to data being subject to privacy laws and governance structures within the nation where that data is collected. (vmware.com)
  • Do public clouds provide data sovereignty? (vmware.com)
  • To thrive economically, Europe needs to become a leading digital economy, but this will only be possible if Europe regains control, trust, and sovereignty in data and digital technology. (oliverwyman.com)
  • These policies include a framework for data and operational sovereignty, including how OCI stores and manages access to data, and how data access from entities outside the EU are handled. (oracle.com)
  • So, what is data sovereignty and why do organisations need to care about it? (computerweekly.com)
  • In simple terms, data sovereignty is the concept that data is subject to the regulations of the country in which it was originally collected. (computerweekly.com)
  • Data sovereignty is akin to international travel - when we are back at home, we must obey local laws, but when we are travelling, we are required to obey the laws of the country we are located in. (computerweekly.com)
  • Similarly, data sovereignty implies that an enterprise that has data located in multiple countries must make sure they comply with the data privacy laws of each country or risk punishment. (computerweekly.com)
  • These are just two examples of over 100 different regulations governing data sovereignty globally. (computerweekly.com)
  • As such, organisations could be breaking their data sovereignty and privacy obligations without even knowing it - and the impact of failing to adhere to data sovereignty regulations can be severe. (computerweekly.com)
  • So, how should organisations address the challenges of data sovereignty? (computerweekly.com)
  • They are formal agreements, reached via respectful negotiation conducted in good faith, that recognise an inherent right to some level of sovereignty or self-government. (counterpunch.org)
  • International information sovereignty 4. (e-elgar.com)
  • While Washington leads the international community's sanctions regime on Pyongyang, Trump's excessive remarks are seen as denying South Korean sovereignty. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • A bit later, though, prior to his visit to Moscow, Mr. Maehara accused Moscow of violating the international law in the question of the sovereignty of the islands. (pravda.ru)
  • On 17 March, the Global Governance Programme hosted a workshop organised by visiting fellow Michael Sanfey which brought together international experts to look at sovereignty from a range of different perspectives, thereby enhancing our understanding of this foundational idea. (eui.eu)
  • Sovereignty is one of the most important concepts in international relations but its precise meaning is not immutable. (eui.eu)
  • Specifically, I analyze Indonesia's use of the international legal principle of sovereignty and its appeal to rules on the protection of biological and genetic resources found in the Convention on Biological Diversity. (cdc.gov)
  • These and other pressures on traditional culture were clear abrogations of tribal sovereignty , but tribes from the Southeast culture area saw just as clearly that fighting them head-on would prove unproductive. (britannica.com)
  • The goal is to not only support our fishers but to provide the public with safe, wholesome fish while protecting tribal sovereignty. (critfc.org)
  • Yes, the UK's membership in the European Union erodes formal sovereignty. (brookings.edu)
  • I am writing you today to warn of an imminent and real threat to the sovereignty of our nation. (wnd.com)
  • Recent events in Ukraine have brought sovereignty back into the spotlight. (eui.eu)
  • Trickle Down, A New Vertical Sovereignty draws on technological and financial power structures which traditionally scaffold the disparity between a wealthy elite and everyday working people but looks to re-imagine our vertically stacked digital ecosystem to horizontally distribute wealth. (fact.co.uk)
  • Definition: What is technological sovereignty? (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research defines technological sovereignty as the aspiration and the ability to play a collaborative role in shaping the development of key technologies and technology based innovations. (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • Our T&M equipment enables customers worldwide to maintain their technological sovereignty. (rohde-schwarz.com)
  • Angst about sovereignty played an important role in the UK's membership of and subsequent exit from the EU. (ssrn.com)
  • The notion that sovereignty is a static and consistently defined term has been an unnecessary stumbling block in past negotiations. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • Within the debates on EU tech sovereignty, regulation, and fragmentation, too little attention is paid to young voices. (dgap.org)
  • However, there are also those traditionalists who emphasise the ongoing practical importance of sovereignty - e.g. in the context of a properly functioning military force. (eui.eu)
  • More recently, the United Nations is shifting away and focusing on establishing empirical sovereignty. (wikipedia.org)
  • Prime Minister May tried to reconcile her sovereignty demands with the needs of the UK economy whereas the Johnson Government pursued a sovereignty-first relationship with the EU to the detriment of its relations with its near neighbours and the UK economy. (ssrn.com)
  • Sovereignty Summer spokesperson Clayton Thomas-Muller says, "Communities are getting ready to make a very significant point over the summer. (canadians.org)
  • Digest I.4.1) Ulpian was expressing the idea that the Emperor exercised a rather absolute form of sovereignty that originated in the people, although he did not use the term expressly. (wikipedia.org)
  • Others dismiss what they see as the chimera of sovereignty and taking back control, preferring an idea of pooled sovereignty - as exemplified by the EU. (eui.eu)
  • This thought-provoking work elaborates on the assumption that information privacy is, in its essence, comparable to information sovereignty. (e-elgar.com)
  • For the July cover story , he was tasked with capturing the essence of a complex term: Native sovereignty. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • The concept of sovereignty has had multiple conflicting components, varying definitions, and diverse and inconsistent applications throughout history. (wikipedia.org)
  • Sovereignty is an amorphous concept that has evolved over time. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • This book deals with a crucial question not only for information law, but for law in general, namely how the concept of sovereignty should apply to flows of digital information in a globalized world. (e-elgar.com)
  • L'importance de l'évaluation par les patients s'inscrit dans un concept de prise en compte de l'opinion du patient pour l'amélioration de la qualité des services de santé. (who.int)
  • This morning, the Globe and Mail reports, "(The Sovereignty Summer) will protest resource projects and pipelines across the country, backed up by demonstrations in cities. (canadians.org)