The first-ever UN Food Systems Summit saw nearly 300 commitments from hundreds of thousands of people from around the world and across all constituencies to accelerate action and to transform food systems.

The Summit process gave rise to several multi-stakeholders¡¯ led by civil society, farmers, women, youth and indigenous groups that Member States commit to in order to deliver on the priorities, needs, and gaps identified in national pathways.

¡°Indigenous Peoples have been supporting the Summit. We have organized dialogues in the seven socio-cultural regions, with almost 300 Indigenous Peoples organizations participating, said Indigenous Peoples rights activist and Summit Advisory Committee member Myrna Cunningham, who launched the at a UN press briefing on Thursday.

The 148 commitments that have been registered so far are collective or institutional commitments to action that are aligned to the Summit¡¯s , and come out as a result of an 18-month inclusive and engaging process with diverse stakeholders.

The Summit process was also applauded by farmer leaders for its inclusivity. ¡°The Summit has been very inclusive,¡± said President of the Pan-African Farmers Organizations (PAFO), Elizabeth, Nsimadala, who represents 80 million farmers across 50 African countries, and is a member of the Summit¡¯s Advisory Committee. ¡°As producers we held several independent dialogues at all levels and these dialogues resulted into a global common position.¡±

The UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed spoke at a on the Food Systems Summit on Thursday and said, ¡°In terms of inclusiveness, I don¡¯t know of a more inclusive process. People look at the SDGs. They see themselves in that, and we wanted to reflect that in this people solution Summit.¡±

In support of national and regional pathways, these multi-stakeholder commitments to action emerged across the Summit¡¯s that were featured at yesterday¡¯s UN Food Systems Summit. These five Actions included Nourish All People, which led to a multi-stakeholder commitment to action on the , and the .

The second action area, Boost Nature-Based Solutions of Production, saw different multi-stakeholder commitments including the . The Advance Equitable Livelihoods, Decent Work, and Empowered Communities brought in the . With countless other initiatives stemming from the Action Area of Build Resilience to Vulnerabilities, Shocks, and Stresses, for instance the , and many more going to Supporting Means of Implementation.

This Action Area helped countries leading up to the UN Food Systems Summit connect to initiatives, and resources around finance, governance, science and knowledge, innovation, technology and data, capacity, and beyond.

 


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