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Research is never free of pressures and constraints and to
understand its results properly these have to be assessed and
analyzed. In agriculture, research into biotechnology and GMOs, as
well as pesticides and herbicides, is big business - agribusiness.
This book looks at the crucial roles of funding and the political
context on the research agenda and its results in agricultural
development. It provides a critical evaluation of the participatory
methods now widely used and explores the ways in which research
into biotechnology have reflected the interests of the various
parties involved.
The Difference was inspired by Judy Mann's need to find out what
she could do to help her own daughter. Where do girls get derailed?
How does it happen? Can the young girls of today climb the ladder
to adulthood without being silenced and submerged into a male
culture? Or will they be forced to spend the decade of their
twenties in denial and their thirties in recovery, like generations
of women before them? Why, after three decades of feminist
fulminations, has so little changed? To find the answers, Mann
immersed herself in a two-year investigation. She interviewed
experts who provided insights into all of the cultural cripplers
that affect girls from time they are born. She visited single-sex
and coed schools, listened to rock and rap music, read school
texts, and talked to parents, psychologists, educators, and
scientists researching gender. She traveled back aeons to find out
what occurred in the ancient past that led to the imbalance of
power that makes today's culture so perilous for girls. She
examined the role of political systems and religions in
perpetuating boys' sense of entitlement and girls' disabling sense
of submission. And she talked at length to her own teenage
daughter, Katherine, and Katherine's friends. What she discovered
is both eye-opening and profoundly disturbing - but optimistic as
well. Mann offers a new way of raising boys and girls so that they
have strategies for dealing with each other that are grounded in
mutual respect, not fear of humiliation. She also makes a point
that has been largely overlooked: we will never change the outcome
for girls unless we change the way we raise boys. The result is
personal, engaging, and always heartfelt. More important,Judy Mann
demonstrates, constructively and compassionately, what we can do as
women, as parents, and as a culture to value "The Difference" and
to raise daughters who are as cherished - and empowered - as our
sons.
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