%0 Journal Article %T Drafting a Law, Dissolving a Proposal: Food Sovereignty and the State in Ecuador %A Alexandra Martinez Flores %A Guido Ruivenkamp %A Joost Jongerden %J Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy %@ 2321-0281 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/2277976018800590 %X Upon being sworn in as the 56th Ecuadorian President on 15 January 2007, Rafael Correa immediately convened, through a referendum, a National Constituent Assembly to draw up a new constitution. One of the concerns of the assembly was to translate into law a food-sovereignty proposal put forward by social movements. In the process of becoming law, the food-sovereignty proposal was much changed. How is it possible that the final version, the law, so far fell short of the food-sovereignty movement¡¯s original proposal? Addressing this question implies a reflection on the role of the state. We argue that (a) instead of strengthening the role of peasants, their participation was reduced to a bureaucratic structure (a ¡®council¡¯) that lacked the capacity to define or implement policies, and (b) the issue of the social function of land and land-reform was removed. I therefore conclude that the social movements¡¯ proposal for food sovereignty was stripped of its essentials %K State %K agrarian change %K food sovereignty %K indigenous and peasant movements %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2277976018800590