2006A WTO dispute panel rules against EU measures to protect the environment and consumers against harm from GMOs; IATP is the first to post the panel's conclusions and recommendations online IATP publishes a primer for free-range poultry farmers to protect them and their flocks against avian influenza, a global health threat IATP publishes a report, summarized in the New York Times, on the incidence of arsenic in U.S. poultry products Mark Ritchie steps down as president; Jim Harkness is hired as IATP's new president 2005IATP publishes Cultivating a New Rural Economy on how bio-based fuels and products can revitalize the Upper Midwest IATP hosts a town hall meeting featuring the UN's Evelyn Herfkens and business leader Marilyn Carlson on the United Nations Millennium Development Goals IATP publishes a critique of the U.S. food aid system for undercutting local food systems in poor countries IATP joins a friend of the court brief in a WTO dispute over the EU's system for regulating GMOs The WTO holds its sixth ministerial in Hong Kong; IATP's Radio Hong Kong podcasts are downloaded more than 13,000 times IATP webcasts live a first-ever meeting between civil society and WTO director-general candidates from Geneva 2004IATP issues paper warning about efforts to privatize oceans for industrial fish farming Monsanto abandons regulatory approval for genetically engineered wheat after farmers object; IATP and the Stop GE Wheat campaign declare victory IATP and the Earth Council launch the WTO E-Learning Center for NGOs and government representatives around the world who want to learn more about how the WTO works IATP participates in the UN Conference on Trade and Development and supports the creation of an international task force on commodities 2003WTO holds its fifth ministerial in Cancún, Mexico. During the ministerial, IATP organizes the first Fair Trade Fair and launches Radio Cancún, daily on-the-ground podcast coverage. IATP issues the first report documenting the presence of bacteria resistant to multiple antibiotics in brand-name poultry products First discovery of mad cow disease in the U.S. 2002IATP and Windustry host the first Upper Midwest Wind Energy Show IATP co-publishes the first book in the Renewing the Countryside series about successful farmers and rural entrepreneurs who protect the land IATP issues its first report documenting export agricultural dumping by U.S.-based food companies Sen. Paul Wellstone and his wife, Sheila, are killed in a plane crash 2001IATP launches the Eat Well Guide, eatwellguide.org, an online directory of sustainably raised meat, poultry, dairy and eggs available from North American farms, stores, restaurants and online merchants WTO holds its fourth ministerial in Doha, Qatar, and launches a new round of trade negotiations with the promise of promoting development IATP hosts a town hall forum with Mary Robinson and Walter Mondale in response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks IATP and other coalition members form the Keep Antibiotics Working campaign to end antibiotic overuse in animal production 2000IATP publishes The Price We Pay for Corporate Hogs, on health, environmental and social costs of factory hog farms With six other groups, IATP launches GE Food Alert to challenge the use of genetically engineered crops in food IATP hosts experts from 11 countries on the precautionary principle as a basis for a regulatory system In Montréal, 131 countries approve the Cartegena Protocol on Biosafety, which addresses specific risks of genetically engineered crops IATP launches Trade Information Project in Geneva to serve as an information clearinghouse on the WTO for NGOs around the world 1999The WTO holds its third ministerial in Seattle IATP hosts the first international NGO media center and broadcasts its first live webcast IATP and the Mississippi Riverwise Partnership work to find solutions to Gulf of Mexico hypoxia; IATP publishes reports on agriculture and climate change IATP conducts a workshop in Zimbabwe for representatives of 18 African governments on the impact of U.S. agriculture policies on Africa IATP works with WTO trade negotiators in Geneva to protect the use of indigenous plants without fear of patent violations IATP participates in its first meeting of the Codex Alimentarius Commission, a food-standards body recognized as authoritative by the WTO 1998IATP's Forestry Program works with forest owners to establish the first value-added, sustainable forestry cooperative in the country IATP marks the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights with an event in New York with Jesse Jackson, John Sweeney and others IATP publishes Bugs in the System: Redesigning the Pesticide Industry for Sustainable Agriculture, edited by William Vorley and Dennis Keeney 1997IATP purchases the 2105 First Av. S. building in Minneapolis, a turn-of-the-century home built by the Crosby family, one of the founders of General Mills IATP launches No Patents on Life campaign and publishes The Ownership of Life IATP introduces environmental impact assessment yardsticks to help farmers reduce chemical use IATP incorporates TransFair USA, the first U.S. fair-trade certification body WTO holds ministerial in Singapore; Mark Ritchie attends as part of the official U.S. delegation 1996IATP forms Peace Coffee with Guatemala's Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú The World Food Summit is held; IATP helps draft a Global Convention on Food Security presented to delegates IATP joins with 25 other groups to form Health Care Without Harm U.S. Congress approves the Freedom to Farm Bill, wiping out programs that had helped stabilize farm prices. As IATP predicts, prices soon collapse IATP joins four other NGOs for its first friend of the court brief in a WTO dispute settlement process for the U.S. challenge of the EU's ban on beef raised on growth promoting hormones 1995IATP holds a series of events nationwide with surviving founders of Bretton Woods and United Nations institutions IATP organizes a Science and Strategy on Chlorine conference to develop strategies for reducing chlorine use IATP promotes farmer-led approaches to protecting watersheds Mark Ritchie is appointed by Vice President Al Gore to the Trade and Environment Policy Advisory Committee 50th anniversary of the United Nations The World Trade Organization goes into effect 1994IATP joins with other activists to form the International Forum on Globalization IATP is the only American NGO present when GATT approves the creation of the World Trade Organization in Marrakech, Morocco. IATP warns about the challenge of WTO rules to democracy at the national level IATP launches its first Web site, iatp.org U.S. Congress approves the North American Free Trade Agreement 1993The New York Times reports on an IATP paper that raises concerns about potentially reintroducing bovine tuberculosis into the U.S. attributable to lax NAFTA regulations IATP opens Selling to America, training seminars for NGO, government and business leaders from countries around the world Congress gives President Bill Clinton fast-track negotiating authority. NAFTA is agreed to by all parties and signed by Clinton; the national debate over NAFTA goes full bore 1992IATP joins AFL-CIO, Friends of the Earth, National Farmers Union, Public Citizen and the Sierra Club in organizing Trade for the 21st Century in Washington, D.C. IATP warns that if NAFTA is passed, the United States will see a wave of immigration from Mexico due to the devastating impact cheap U.S. corn exports will have on the Mexican economy IATP launches email news bulletins Trade News and NAFTA Monitor United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, more commonly known as the Earth Summit, meets in Rio de Janeiro; IATP co-hosts the Global Forum on the GATT at the summit 1991IATP co-hosts a series of trilateral meetings for U.S., Mexican and Canadian organizations on forestry, farm policy, immigration and environmental standards as they relate to trade IATP publishes a legal critique of the GATT Tuna/Dolphin decision, which strikes down U.S. legislation designed to protect dolphins from death and injury in the nets of tuna fishermen In New York, IATP conducts trainings and strategy coordination for 20 coalition partners in preparation for the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development 1990IATP arranges exchanges among U.S. and Mexican organizations leading up to the battle over NAFTA IATP organizes an international conference of consumer organizations in Geneva to discuss how GATT will impact consumer protections, including food safety. IATP warns that a proposal could categorize health and safety standards as trade barriers IATP distributes "Trading Away Our Future"a video on how GATT affects American agriculture policyto over 1,000 local organizers, opinion leaders and teachers Paul Wellstone, one of IATP's earliest and strongest supporters, is elected to the United States Senate 1989IATP moves out of Mark's basement and into our first office at Sabathani Community Center IATP purchases its first secret weapon: a Toshiba TF581 fax machine, immortalized in a Nov. 23 Financial Times article: "Through a busy fax machine, Mr. Ritchie keeps farm groups more abreast of GATT developments than many members of Congress." IATP, in conjunction with the Canadian Environmental Law Association, organizes Trading Away the Environment, a conference outlining threats GATT poses for environmental protection, including climate change The United States, Canada and Mexico launch talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement 1988IATP, Prairiefire Rural Action and League of Rural Voters hold a presidential candidate forum on agriculture issues in Ames, Iowa A GATT meeting in Montréal is met by thousands of anti-globalization protesters. It is one of the first organized civil society challenges to GATT and, later, the WTO IATP organizes a meeting of farm leaders from the U.S., Canada, Japan and Europe in Brainerd, Minnesota, just prior to the Big Four Summit to negotiate the Uruguay Round agriculture agreement. IATP and farm leaders call for the ministers to retain domestic farm policies, stop agriculture dumping, support fair markets and protect the right to food security 1987IATP launches the Sustainable Agriculture Computer Network with email, access to shared data and research, news wire services, electronic conferencing and bulletin boards IATP organizes a series of exchanges with European partners; exchanges include bringing German farm leaders from the Protestant Farmers Association to the United States IATP organizes the first GATT workshop for farm leaders, agricultural policy makers, churches and other NGOs in Geneva The U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement is signed; it is a precursor to the North American Free Trade Agreement 1986IATP is founded and headquartered in the basement of Mark Ritchie's house at 3838 Blaisdell Av., Minneapolis The Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade is launched 1985The first Farm Aid is held in Champaign, Illinois In November, an international conference, Impact of Agricultural Trade on Domestic Farm Policies, is held in Geneva Leaders of the meeting decide an American organization is needed to focus on the role of trade and international institutions on domestic farm policy The meeting brings together many people who will become IATP's board of directors and the idea for IATP is formed 1984From the 1983 Ottawa meeting, U.S. and European farm leaders and researchers form an informal network that includes exchanges and study tours 1983Mark Ritchie hosts the Old Timers Conference, bringing together the surviving leadership of the progressive farm movements from the 1920s to the present Farm leaders from Europe, Asia and the Americas hold an emergency meeting at Canada's parliament in Ottawa to address the worsening agricultural trade situation. The First International Farm Crisis Summit is organized by Mark Ritchie 1979Mark Ritchie writes Loss of Family Farms, a powerful indictment of U.S. farm policy, which intentionally cut the number of farmers in the country In 1986, leaders of rural and farm movements from around the world gathered in Geneva to discuss the deepening farm crisis that was forcing farmers off the land and devastating rural communities. It quickly became clear that many of the obstacles facing farmers in the U.S. were the same challenges facing farmers in Europe, Asia and Africa, and that international trade agreements were deeply affecting local rural communities across the globe. At the conclusion of the Geneva meeting, a small group of rural and farm leaders—who now comprise IATP's board of directors—identified the need for a new organization to examine the links between global policy and local communities. Mark Ritchie, then a trade policy analyst for the state of Minnesota, returned from the Geneva meeting to the United States and incorporated the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy as a non-profit, tax-exempt organization, with the mission of fostering sustainable rural communities and regions. In 1987, IATP began to organize and report on the newly launched round of international trade negotiations being conducted by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade or GATT—which eventually became the World Trade Organization. The rules of agricultural trade set in the GATT and implemented at the WTO have deeply influenced national and local farm policies around the globe over the last two decades. Since its founding, IATP has played a unique role in analyzing international trade policy and summarizing the ramifications of these policies on local communities, both in the U.S. and abroad. In the 1990s, IATP expanded beyond its initial focus on international policymaking institutions like the WTO to include the promotion of positive alternatives to economically, socially and environmentally destructive agricultural and trade practices. This wider focus gave IATP the opportunity to work with a much larger audience of partners. For example, with the Center for Agriculture and the Environment in the Netherlands, IATP developed tools to help U.S. farmers increase their income by reducing on-farm pollution. We tackled major health concerns of rural communities by organizing campaigns to stop the contamination of farmland by toxic waste incinerators. We helped launch international efforts to promote certified sustainable farming, fishing and forestry and sustainable consumption, including fair trade for farmers and fair wages for everyone working to put food on our tables. We put our ideas into action to demonstrate the viability of fair trade by founding Transfair USA, an international fair trade certification organization, and starting Peace Coffee, now a nationally consumed fair trade coffee brand. With offices and staff in the U.S. and Switzerland, IATP continues to expand international partnerships, adapting ideas, strategies and experiences from the global community to the challenges facing local communities. The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy promotes resilient family farms, rural communities and ecosystems around the world through research and education, science and technology, and advocacy. Trade and Global Governance works to democratize the multilateral system of policy-making. We strengthen civil society by linking social movements working on trade, development, peace, human rights, labor, gender, the environment and corporate responsibility. Rural Communities works to revitalize the countryside through sustainable markets and production for the bioeconomy, community-based development strategies, and progressive rural leadership and policies. Food and Health makes food healthier by advocating for sustainable food production and a less-contaminated food supply while supporting family farmers and rural communities. Environment and Agriculture enhances the quality of life in rural agricultural communities by promoting conservation-based economic opportunities and encouraging agricultural diversification, value-added opportunities, regional food systems and effective farm, food and transportation policy. Forestry promotes responsible forest management by encouraging the long-term health and prosperity of small, privately owned woodlots, their owners and their communities. Local Foods is a cross cutting effort that brings together all the strands of IATP’s local foods work. From producer to consumer, healthy foods to public health, and policy proposals to new business opportunities, the goal of IATP’s Local Foods Program is to transform our food and agriculture systems. |
Check out what the Star Tribune had to say about IATP's award-winning, 100% organic and fair trade coffee company, Peace Coffee. |
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