Trabalho de Conclusão de Curso de Graduação
(In)segurança alimentar: o papel da cooperação Sul-Sul entre Brasil e Moçambique para o combate à fome (2007-2022)
Fecha
2023-02-01Autor
Schmeling, Guilherme dos Santos
Institución
Resumen
Discussions regarding the promotion of food security gained greater international relevance
after the inclusion of this concept in security debates starting in the early 1990s. With the end
of the bipolar tension in the scope of the Cold War, food security began to be one of the main
objectives pursued by States in the face of a constant imminence of food shortages on a global
scale. Since then, food insecurity has become a widespread concern in which international
cooperation has been invoked as the main instrument for dissolving this malady. International
cooperation, when it encompasses the precepts of reciprocity and mutual gains, becomes a
positive instrument to be used in the fight against obstacles that stifle human progress and
development, in this case, hunger. In this sense, based on the cooperation between Brazil and
Mozambique to combat hunger and taking into account the Brazilian success in combating this
disease at the national level in the first decade of the 2000s, the present work aims to analyze
the bilateral cooperation between the two countries to understand why the partnership did not
result in similar results in the African country. The research has a qualitative character in which
documental and bibliographical analysis is used as research instruments. The study was guided
by the hypothetical-deductive method circumscribed in the hypotheses that the persistence of
food insecurity in Mozambique is based on the lack of subsidies to strengthen peasant
agriculture, as a producer and supplier of food, in favor of large-scale production based on
export monoculture; as well as in food vulnerability expressed in the country's political
instability in the face of constant internal conflicts, which prevent the State from employing
and strengthening assertive policies to combat hunger. As a result of the study, it was concluded
that: (i) bilateral cooperation did not have a structuring effect and that it acted only passively
based on an assistencialist character; (ii) the projects aimed at the development of the peasantry
did not have a multiplier effect on the knowledge acquired; (iii) the instability of Mozambican
state capacities reject government initiatives to combat hunger; (iv) and the development of
peasant agriculture continues to be the most promising alternative to fight this disease.