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Food Rebellions! takes a deep look at the world food crisis and its
impact on the global South and underserved communities in the
industrial North. Eric Holt-Gimenez and Raj Patel unpack the
planet's environmentally and economically vulnerable food systems
to reveal the root causes of the crisis. They shows us how the
steady erosion of local and national control over their food
systems has made nations dependent on a volatile global market and
subject to the short-term interests of a handful of transnational
agri-food monopolies. Food Rebellions! is a powerful handbook for
those seeking to understand the causes and potential solutions to
the current food crisis now affecting nearly half of the world's
people. Why are food riots occurring around the world in a time of
record harvests? What are the real impacts of agrofuels and
genetically engineered crops? Food Rebellions! suggests that to
solve the food crisis, we must change the global food system-from
the bottom up and from the top down. The book frames the current
food crisis as unique opportunity to develop productive local food
systems that are engines for sustainable economic development.
Hunger and poverty, the authors insist, can be eliminated by
democratising food systems and respecting people's right to safe,
nutritious and culturally appropriate food and to food-producing
resources-in short, by advancing food sovereignty.
A fundamentally contested concept, food sovereignty (FS) has - as a
political project and campaign, an alternative, a social movement
and an analytical framework - barged into global discourses, both
political and academic, over the past two decades. This collection
identifies a number of key questions regarding FS. What does
(re)localisation mean? How does the notion of FS connect with
similar and/or overlapping ideas historically? How does it address
questions of both market and non-market forces in a dominantly
capitalist world? How does FS deal with such differentiating social
contradictions? How does the movement deal with larger issues of
nation-state, where a largely urbanised world of non-food producing
consumers harbours interests distinct from those of farmers? How
does FS address the current trends of crop booms, as well as other
alternatives that do not sit comfortably within the basic tenets of
FS, such as corporate-captured fair trade? How does FS grapple with
the land question and move beyond the narrow 'rural/agricultural'
framework? Such questions call for a new era of research into FS, a
movement and theme that in recent years has inspired and mobilised
tens of thousands of activists and academics around the world:
young and old, men and women, rural and urban. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.
A fundamentally contested concept, food sovereignty (FS) has - as a
political project and campaign, an alternative, a social movement
and an analytical framework - barged into global discourses, both
political and academic, over the past two decades. This collection
identifies a number of key questions regarding FS. What does
(re)localisation mean? How does the notion of FS connect with
similar and/or overlapping ideas historically? How does it address
questions of both market and non-market forces in a dominantly
capitalist world? How does FS deal with such differentiating social
contradictions? How does the movement deal with larger issues of
nation-state, where a largely urbanised world of non-food producing
consumers harbours interests distinct from those of farmers? How
does FS address the current trends of crop booms, as well as other
alternatives that do not sit comfortably within the basic tenets of
FS, such as corporate-captured fair trade? How does FS grapple with
the land question and move beyond the narrow 'rural/agricultural'
framework? Such questions call for a new era of research into FS, a
movement and theme that in recent years has inspired and mobilised
tens of thousands of activists and academics around the world:
young and old, men and women, rural and urban. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.
Capitalism drives our global food system. Everyone who wants to end
hunger, who wants to eat good, clean, healthy food, needs to
understand capitalism. This book will help do that. In his latest
book, Eric Holt-Gimenez takes on the social, environmental, and
economic crises of the capitalist mode of food production. Drawing
from classical and modern analyses, A Foodie's Guide to Capitalism
introduces the reader to the history of our food systemand to the
basics of capitalism. In straightforward prose, Holt-Gimenez
explains the political economics of why--even as local, organic,
and gourmet food have spread around the world--billions go hungry
in the midst of abundance; why obesity is a global epidemic; and
why land-grabbing, global warming, and environmental pollution are
increasing. Holt-Gimenez offers emblematic accounts--and
critiques--of past and present-day struggles to change the food
system, from voting with your fork, to land occupations. We learn
about the potential and the pitfalls of organic and
community-supported agriculture, certified fair trade,
microfinance, land trusts, agrarian reform, cooperatives, and food
aid. We also learn about the convergence of growing social
movements using the food system to challenge capitalism. How did
racism, classism, and patriarchy become structural components of
our food system? Why is a rational agriculture incompatible with
the global food regime? Can transforming our food system transform
capitalism? These are questions that can only be addressed by first
understanding how capitalism works.
In this very timely book, two of the world’s most prominent critics of the global food system, Eric Holt-Giménez and Raj Patel, dissect the causes of hunger and the food price crisis, locating them in a political economy of capitalist industrial production dominated by corporations and driven by the search for profits for the few instead of the welfare of the many. Here, greed has played just as destructive role as in the financial sector.
This book is an analytical resource for anyone interested in understanding the food crisis. It is also an information manual for those who wish to do something about it.
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Agrofuels in the Americas (Paperback)
Richard Jonasse; Annie Shattuck, Eric Holt-gimenez, Gretchen Gordon, Jessica Aguirre, …
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R473
R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
Save R75 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Agrofuels in the Americas
Behind the hype and misinformation surrounding agrofuels lie the
wrenching realities of hunger and poverty, the loss of land for
food production, destructive agricultural practices, the
advancement of genetically modified crops and synthetic organisms;
and land use changes that lead to a loss of irreplaceable biomes,
contribute to global warming, and diminish planetary
biodiversity.
Industrialized countries, unable to meet their renewable fuel
mandates, have turned to the agricultural resources of the Global
South to fill their energy needs. In Latin America, Northern
corporations and Southern elites have locked up vast tracts of land
for industrial monocrop agrofuels: cutting down rainforests,
plowing up diverse native savannahs, and destroying the future
fertility of the land with short-sighted agricultural
practices.
Agrofuels provide agricultural corporations with an opportunity to
squeeze more profit out of both food and fuel. Financial
institutions looking for solid ground in a stagnating economy have
jumped into the fray, pouring billions of investment dollars and
Euros into agrofuel investments, fanning the flames, and causing
further dislocation and destruction. International Financial
Institutions are backing agrofuels as a trickle-down tool for
'rural development.'
In Latin America, the rural poor and indigenous populations are
losing their access to land; leading to poverty, dislocation and
the inability to grow their own food. Their only recourse often
lies in chasing the relatively few tenuous, seasonal jobs that the
agrofuels industry provides. The agrofuels trade thus places poor
laborers at the bottom of an export-oriented value chain from which
they cannot escape. It has led to food shortages and increased
hunger.
For those familiar with the history of Latin America this is a very
old story cloaked in new "green" clothing. Behind the myth
perpetuated by corporations that we can save the planet through
activities that spin off tremendous environmental and social
externalities lies an ongoing consolidation of corporate power over
our food and fuel systems.
Capitalism drives our global food system. Everyone who wants to end
hunger, who wants to eat good, clean, healthy food, needs to
understand capitalism. This book will help do that. In his latest
book, Eric Holt-Gimenez takes on the social, environmental, and
economic crises of the capitalist mode of food production. Drawing
from classical and modern analyses, A Foodie's Guide to Capitalism
introduces the reader to the history of our food systemand to the
basics of capitalism. In straightforward prose, Holt-Gimenez
explains the political economics of why--even as local, organic,
and gourmet food have spread around the world--billions go hungry
in the midst of abundance; why obesity is a global epidemic; and
why land-grabbing, global warming, and environmental pollution are
increasing. Holt-Gimenez offers emblematic accounts--and
critiques--of past and present-day struggles to change the food
system, from voting with your fork, to land occupations. We learn
about the potential and the pitfalls of organic and
community-supported agriculture, certified fair trade,
microfinance, land trusts, agrarian reform, cooperatives, and food
aid. We also learn about the convergence of growing social
movements using the food system to challenge capitalism. How did
racism, classism, and patriarchy become structural components of
our food system? Why is a rational agriculture incompatible with
the global food regime? Can transforming our food system transform
capitalism? These are questions that can only be addressed by first
understanding how capitalism works.
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