The international legal architecture governing plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, food security, trade and intellectual property is made up of a number of international bodies with overlapping mandates. This legal architecture is fragmented, having been developed as individual responses to particular issues and often in reaction to one another. The result is lack of a coherent and shared vision.
In December 2015, the global community agreed to Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development and seventeen SDGs. By conscious reference to these goals, each institution or treaty-body can place itself in a larger context and understand the role is plays in their achievement.
QUNO invites relevant international bodies to collaborate in order to bring coherence to particular outstanding issues:
- Implementation of Farmers’ Rights in the context of international IP rules.
- The realization of the Right to Food in the context of international trade rules.
- The need to discuss complementary and alternatives strategies to access and benefit-sharing (ABS) to achieve agrobiodiversity conservation and benefit-sharing.
- Recognition of small-scale farmer innovation.

