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Why can Asia now feed its rapidly growing population, but Africa
continues to experience famine? This book is the outcome of a
three-year project coordinated by a group of Swedish researchers
with collaborating scholars from Africa and Asia. It provides a
comparative study between Asian agricultural development during the
Green Revolution in food production and the current problematic
agricultural situation in sub-Saharan Africa. Based on case studies
of eight African and eight Asian countries (focusing on the early
part of the Green Revolution), this book presents a causal and
explanatory model of Asian green revolutions. It discusses why such
progress has been made in Asia, but has not yet occurred in Africa.
It also examines the implications of the case studies for future
development in Africa.
Poverty in sub-Saharan Africa is predominantly a rural and
agricultural phenomenon. The large majority of all poor are farmers
and herders, therefore as long as the poor remain smallholders,
alleviation of poverty remains an agricultural task. African
Smallholders documents the farm-level effects of agricultural
policies, focusing on a variety of themes including micro-credit,
infrastructure, cash crop production and food security. To deepen
our understanding of agricultural development it discusses staple
food production in sub-Saharan Africa and its response to changing
geo-political, macro-economic and agricultural policy. It is a
useful resource for all those researching or involved with food
security, agricultural and rural development in sub-Saharan Africa.
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