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Can Industrial Crops Feed the World? No.

IAASTD logo

Two important bits of news from the world of agricultural technology. First, we've a report that genetically modified soy beans yield less than ordinary ones. The study was motivated by a professor who heard soybean farmers asking "how come I don't get as high a yield as I used to?". A good question indeed. One answer - it wasn't designed to yield more, it was designed to withstand a herbicide sold by the same company that sells the seed.

But there's a bigger answer to the question of the future of agricultural technology. It comes with a report of the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD). Snappy title? No. Bed-time reading? Hardly. It's hundreds of dense pages long (and I'll be reading it over the next week, so you won't have to).

But already, the IAASTD is an acronym to remember. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 2 comments


Posted on 21 April, 2008 - 03:11

 

International Day of Peasants’ Struggle!


Source: Via Campesina

Today’s the International Day of Peasants’ Struggle, and there’ll be over 60 actions taking place around the world to celebrate it.

The day is as good as any to write about a concern that every writer about social movements has to face. It’s a question about representation. While I’ve certainly got some ideas about the structure of the modern food system, and am happy to share them, the voices of the people most directly involved can often get muffled by voices like mine.

So, on the contact form, I’ve wangled a way for folk (particularly the media) to get directly in touch with farmers and peasant movements in Via Campesina. Can’t think of something more appropriate for today than for me to get out of the way of farmers and landless people speaking for themselves. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 1 comment


Posted on 17 April, 2008 - 16:36

 

Robert Zoellick Makes Me Sick

[From the Comment is Free section of The Guardian.]

Robert Zoellick

For anyone who understands the current food crisis, it is hard to listen to the head of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, without gagging. ... read more »

Raj's blog


Posted on 15 April, 2008 - 02:27

 

Haiti and The King Canute of Food

I’m a little disappointed with The Observer today. I’d been holding back on posting all my thoughts about food riots so that I could pull them out of the hat today with a comment piece in their pages. My article began with worries about globalisation and the consequences of food riots in Haiti.

The piece was bumped yesterday afternoon.

Yesterday evening it was announced that the Haitian Prime Minister, Jacques Edouard Alexis, had been fired in a special session of the Haitian Senate because of the food riots.
Jacques Edouard Alexis

Then Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the head of the International Monetary Fund, announced imminent global disaster from food price rises.

Since I’m still hoping that the piece will still appear somewhere, and since it now needs rewriting, I’ll not post it quite yet. But here’s what the stories of the price rises leave out, and why there’s reason to fear that Haiti’s fate is likely to be that of many other countries. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 20 comments


Posted on 13 April, 2008 - 19:38

 

How to Think About Food Riots

haiti food riot

I just recorded a radio segment for The World with the splendid Lisa Mullins. I was there to talk about food riots. Unfortunately, I wasn't terribly coherent and, despite the skilled editing of the folk there, I worry that my butchery of the argument I was trying to make cannot be fixed.

I was trying to talk about Egypt, Haiti and Senegal, three places from which reporters were sending news. So here's my attempt at restitution - a short guide on how to think about the food riots. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 16 comments


Posted on 10 April, 2008 - 17:44

 

Via Campesina on The Global Food Crisis

Via Campesina logo

So here's a response from Via Campesina to the food price crisis. I imagine that in the wake of the food riots, the temptation to say 'told you so' must have been overwhelming to the representatives of farmers' and landless peoples' movements around the world.

But instead they've an admirable critique of some of the dominant myths about the way our food comes to us, about who wins and loses from the high prices, and what to do about it. Their solutions are ones that have been proposed for decades. The question is whether anyone will listen to them now, or whether the shock doctrine will prevail here too, with food corporations seeking to privatise the food system yet further. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 1 comment


Posted on 10 April, 2008 - 13:15

 

Dying to Lose Weight

superman's fat arse
Image:AboutColonBlank

A reporter at Bloomberg dropped a line with this story about diet pills in India. What with Indians ballooning (as we all are) there's something of a demand for weight-loss remedies.

The remedies that make sense (eat less, be a little more physically active, don't eat processed food, enjoy fresh food more) aren't terribly popular. Generating far more interest are the solutions that let you carry on eating unhealthily, but where you don't have to bother trying too hard. The chemical companies have been lining up to provide something like this, a magic regulator of free will that can help take the edge off our food cravings.

Through the cunning use of cannabis, specifically the discovery of how to switch off that part of the brain that makes you crave Mars bars when you're high, the drug giant Sanofi-Aventis has hit on a billion dollar weight-loss drug: Acompli. ... read more »

Raj's blog | 4 comments


Posted on 5 April, 2008 - 09:58

 

Food: Who Pays the Price?

bbc world debate panel

Update
Thanks to Hande for pointing out that the video is now available to view and download at at the IFAD website and now on Google Video here:

___________________ ... read more »

Raj's blog | 13 comments


Posted on 28 March, 2008 - 22:46