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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Primary industries > Agriculture & related industries
This title is intended as a manual for environmental education
practitioners. It provides theoretical background with the view of
improving environmental education practitioners' practice.
Environmental education addresses topics such as: The origin of the
term/concept environmental education in southern Africa; a
philosophical perspective of environmental education; teaching for
the environment; environmental issues; education for
sustainability; environmental education in the informal sector;
environmental education in business and industry; research in
environmental education.
Nearly three decades after the dawn of democracy, South Africa has
remained a country of ‘two agricultures’. On the one hand we have
a subsistence, primarily non-commercial, black farming segment.
On the other hand, however, we have a predominantly commercial
and white farming sector that is well-resourced and has access to
domestic and international trade networks.
These disparities can be traced back to South Africa’s painful history where, for decades, black farmers were on the margins of government support and also experienced land dispossession and livestock plunder.
A Country of Two Agricultures focuses less on history and more on the present and the future, explaining why these disparities have persisted in the democratic era, and what it will take to overcome them. It aims to contribute to a better understanding of the variety of
agricultural forces, taking into account both questions of domestic
political economy and external factors, as well as to bring to light
new risks and opportunities.
Wandile Sihlobo offers insights into the role of agriculture in the
South African economy from an agricultural economy perspective,
and provides political economy insights that are rooted in the experiences of farming communities on the ground and right through the
value chain.
Beyond insights on the realities this book offers the government, the
private sector, and anyone interested in the betterment of the South
African economy, tools to grapple with this duality, and proposes a
framework for bolstering the black farming segment for growth and
competitiveness – and ultimately food security.
A completely revised, updated, and repackaged second edition of the
2013 bestselling beer guide. First published in 2013, The
Complete Beer Course has helped thousands of beer enthusiasts
navigate the vast and often confusing world of beer. Bernstein is
back to serve up a second round of insights. He introduces readers
to must-know breweries, craft beers, and the industry’s rising
stars. Each chapter is devoted to a specific beer style and teaches
readers how to taste and evaluate a wide selection, especially new
beers gaining popularity such as sours and nonalcoholic varieties.
Additionally, readers will find up-to-date information on the
pandemic’s effects on the beer world, expanded coverage of
international beers, and the author’s top picks for any
beer-drinking occasion. If your knowledge of IPAs is a little hazy,
then this guide is for you.  Fans of Randy Mosher’s
Tasting Beer or The Beer Bible by Jeff Alworth, who are looking for
the most up-to-date information on the world of beer, will find
just what they need in this book. Perfect for beer fans
everywhere—from casual beer drinkers to homebrew
enthusiasts—The Complete Beer Course is the ultimate beer book
and makes a great gift for dads, bartenders, or anyone else looking
to level up their beer knowledge.
'An important and timely book' from the Foreword by Stanley Johnson
'A complete and absorbing history of a decade of intense
international politics offers many insights for future negotiators
of sustainable solutions' Stephen Bass, International Institute for
Environment and Development 'Skillfully navigates the jungle of
forest politics, leaving us in no doubt that the verbal commitment
to save the world's forests has yet to be translated into action on
the ground. The way forward must clearly lie in political
commitments and international cooperation if forests are to
continue to preserve life on Earth' Francis Sullivan, World Wide
Fund for Nature Global deforestation and its attendant processes -
including soil degradation, climate change and the loss of
biological diversity - emerged as international political issues
during the 1980s, prompting politicians to seek consensus on
programmes and policies for the conservation and sustainable
management of forests. Yet global initiatives have been bedevilled
by tensions between the North and South and between governments,
industry, local communities and indigenous peoples. Meanwhile,
rates of deforestation in the tropics are increasing, and
international political efforts are demonstrably failing. Forest
Politics carefully traces the evolution of international
cooperation on forests, from the inception of the controversial
International Tropical Timber Organization and the failed Tropical
Forestry Action Programme in the mid-1980s, to the creation of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Forests in the mid-1990s. The book also
provides a detailed analysis of the negotiating stances of the
parties involved in the divisive negotiations that rook place prior
to the 1992 'Earth Summit' in Rio de Janeiro and the equally
factious negotiations for the International Tropical Timber
Agreement of 1994. It provides a fascinating insight into the
nature of such processes, illustrating the difficulties that arise
when concepts such as 'global commons' come into conflict with
national sovereignty. Complete with annexes of important political
documents, and making extensive use of primary source material and
interviews with participants. Forest Politics presents case studies
of all the major forest negotiations over the last 13 years. It is
an essential reference point for policy makers, environmental
campaigners and students, and required reading for all those who
care about the future of the world's forests. David Humphreys is
Research Fellow in Global Environmental Change at the Open
University. Originally published in 1996
The depletion of the tropical rain forests has attracted
considerable attention in recent times, and the serious
consequences for the global biosphere are widely acknowledged. Yet
deforestation continues apace, and in some areas (for example,
southeast Asia) the very existence of the forests is seriously
threatened. Contrary to popular belief, evidence suggests that
local economic and living conditions are more significant in this
than timber exploitation for exports to the Northern
countries."Tropical Deforestation: A Socio-Economic Approach"
offers a new perspective on the economic imperatives which
encourage indigenous populations to encroach upon their own
forests, and shows how action against deforestation must form part
of a wider movement to improve both the living conditions of the
local inhabitants and the durability of their national
economies.Part One offers an overview of the processes surrounding
deforestation, and an assessment of the current situation. Part Two
analyses the land-use issues, and explains the socioeconomic
imperatives in the affected regions. In an absorbing conclusion.
Part Three guides the reader through a series of hypothetical
policy scenarios, using a specially adapted economic computer
model, to predict which combinations of policies and trade
arrangements might bring about a more beneficial state of affairs.
This book is the first coherent quantified assessment of the
economy of the Roman Empire. George Maher argues inventively and
rigorously for a much higher level of growth and prosperity than
has hitherto been imagined, and also explains why, nonetheless, the
Roman Empire did not achieve the transition which began in Georgian
Britain. This book will have an enormous impact on Roman history
and be required reading for all teachers and students in the field.
It will also interest and provoke historians of the medieval and
early modern periods into wondering why their economies failed to
match the Roman level. Part of the problem in assessing the Roman
economy is that we do not have much in the way of numerical data,
but Roman historians, who rarely have much statistical expertise,
have not always recognised the potential of the data we do have. Dr
Maher's reassessment of the economy of the Roman Empire has to use
the same data as everyone else, but he is able to draw strikingly
novel conclusions in two ways: first, by more statistically
sophisticated use of a few crucial datasets and, second, by
correlating and drawing a coherent picture across the whole
economy. On grain yields, firstly, instead of getting bogged down
in details of individual cases, George Maher shows how there is a
remarkably consistent pattern from which outliers can be excluded,
showing yields were much higher than normally assumed. He then
demonstrates that high yields are in fact necessary to explain the
exceptional urbanization of the Empire. Urbanization at this level
in turn, as George Maher shows, has implications for consumption
and commerce. He takes this further to show how high levels of
trade imply high levels of sophistication in economic practices and
mentality. In one of his most methodologically novel chapters,
George Maher develops a new and simpler way of assessing average
life expectancy and argues for a life expectancy almost double the
traditional view. This book, Dr George Maher's doctoral thesis, is
the theoretical underpinning of his book Pugnare: Economic Success
and Failure.
Freedom Mazwi examines patterns of agricultural finance in Zimbabwe
since the radical Fast Track Land Resettlement Programme (FTLRP)
was implemented in 2000-and, especially, the varying impact that
the FTLRP reforms have had not only on land use, but also on the
well-being of farmers.Focusing on contract farming in the tobacco
and sugarcane sectors, Mazwi offers penetrating insights into
social contradictions and power relations in Zimbabwe's rural
areas. He also assesses the institutional finance mechanisms that
have emerged in response to the radical land reforms and reflects
on the related political and economic isolation of the country
since 2000. Not least, he suggests how agrarian policy could be
restructured to better benefit small-scale farmers.
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