May

30

2017

30

Mayo

2017

NAFTA 101 Briefing Series: Agriculture and Migration, What Was Promised, What Was Delivered, and How We Can Do Better With NAFTA-Renegotiations

2168 Rayburn House Office Building 50 Independence Ave. Washington, D.C. 20024

May 30, 2017

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM (GMT-5)

Host:

Representative Marcy Kaptur

Nearly a quarter century has passed since the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was initially negotiated.  Its proponents promised it would lead to job creation and increased living standards for workers in all three countries. Yet, some of the most adversely impacted communities are small farmers. Rural flight and increased food insecurities have resulted, as industrial agriculture has taken over production chains often leading to increased migration as local economies falter.

With the Administration's recent notice to Congress of its intent to renegotiate NAFTA, we see an opportunity. Renegotiating NAFTA offers the possibility to address food insecurity, remedy the incentive that drives rural dislocation, and fix other problems in the agriculture sector caused by NAFTA.

Sister Simone Campbell, Executive Director of NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

Laura Carlsen, Director of Americas Program at Center for International Policy

Karen Hansen-Kuhn, Director, Trade and Global Governance at Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

Abel Nunez, Executive Director of CARECEN, Latino Resource and Justice Center America

Mark Weisbrot, Co-Director of Center for Economic & Policy Research

Patrick Woodall, Research Director/Senior Policy Advocate at Food & Water Watch

Each panelist will deliver brief remarks, which will be followed by an open discussion, Q&A period.

You can watch the event here.

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