Our Land Our Lives Time out in the global land rush

Our Land  Our Lives   Time out in the global land rush
Author: Kate Geary
Publsiher: Oxfam
Total Pages: 26
Release: 2012
Genre: Land tenure
ISBN: 9781780771809

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Where Shrimp Eat Better than People

Where Shrimp Eat Better than People
Author: Wilma Dunaway,Maria Cecilia Macabuac
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 459
Release: 2022-10-31
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9789004522657

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East, South and Southeast Asia are home to two-thirds of the world’s hungry people, but they produce more than three-quarters of the world’s fish and nearly half of other foods. Through integration into the world food system, these Asian fisheries export their most nutritious foods and import less healthy substitutes. Worldwide, their exports sell cheap because women, the hungriest Asians, provide unpaid subsidies to production processes. In the 21st century, Asian peasants produce more than 60 percent of the regional food supply, but their survival is threatened by hunger, public depeasantization policies, climate change, land grabbing, urbanization and debt bondage. *Where Shrimp Eat Better than People: Globalized Fisheries, Nutritional Unequal Exchange and Asian Hunger is now available in paperback for individual customers.

Tipping the Balance Policies to shape agricultural investments and markets in favour of small scale farmers

Tipping the Balance  Policies to shape agricultural investments and markets in favour of small scale farmers
Author: Bill Vorley,Lorenzo Cotula,Man-Kwun Chan
Publsiher: Oxfam
Total Pages: 88
Release: 2012
Genre: Agriculture
ISBN: 9781780772288

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Eating Drinking Surviving

Eating  Drinking  Surviving
Author: Peter Jackson,Walter E.L. Spiess,Farhana Sultana
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2016-11-24
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9783319424682

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This publication addresses the global challenges of food and water security in a rapidly changing and complex world. The essays highlight the links between bio-physical and socio-cultural processes, making connections between local and global scales, and focusing on the everyday practices of eating and drinking, essential for human survival. Written by international experts, each contribution is research-based but accessible to the general public.

Advances in Food Security and Sustainability

Advances in Food Security and Sustainability
Author: Marc J. Cohen
Publsiher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2020-10-16
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780128207123

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Advances in Food Security and Sustainability, Volume Five, takes a scientific look at the challenges, constraints and solutions necessary to maintain a healthy and accessible food supply in different communities. This ongoing series addresses a wide range of issues on food sustainability and security, exploring challenges related to protecting environmental resources while also meeting human nutritional requirements. Contains expertise from leading contributors on the topics Covers a vast array of subjects relating to food security and sustainability Explores challenges related to protecting environmental resources while also meeting human nutritional requirements

Food Justice in US and Global Contexts

Food Justice in US and Global Contexts
Author: Ian Werkheiser,Zachary Piso
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2017-07-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9783319571744

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This book offers fresh perspectives on issues of food justice. The chapters emerged from a series of annual workshops on food justice held at Michigan State University between 2013 and 2015, which brought together a wide variety of interested people to learn from and work with each other. Food justice can be studied from such diverse perspectives as philosophy, anthropology, economics, gender and sexuality studies, geography, history, literary criticism, philosophy and sociology as well as the human dimensions of agricultural and environmental sciences. As such, interdisciplinary workshops are a much-needed vehicle to improve our understanding of the subject, which is at the center of a vibrant and growing discourse not only among academics from a wide range of disciplines but also among policy makers and community activists. The book includes their perspectives, offering a wide range of approaches to and conceptions of food justice in a variety of contexts. This invaluable work requires readers to cross boundaries and be open to new ideas based on different assumptions.

Women in Agriculture Worldwide

Women in Agriculture Worldwide
Author: Amber J. Fletcher,Wendee Kubik
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2016-07-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781134774647

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Over the past two decades, existing documentation of women in the agricultural sector has surveyed topics such as agricultural restructuring and land reform, international trade agreements and food trade, land ownership and rural development and rural feminisms. Many studies have focused on either the high-income countries of the global North or the low-income countries of the global South. This separation suggests that the North has little to learn from the South, or that there is little shared commonality across the global dividing line. Fletcher and Kubik cross this political, economic, and ideological division by drawing together authors from 5 continents. They discuss the situation for women in agriculture in 13 countries worldwide, with two chapters that cover international contexts. The authors blur the boundaries between academic and organizational authors and their contributors include university-based researchers, gender experts, development consultants, and staff of agricultural research centers and international organizations (i.e., Oxfam, the United Nations World Food Program). The common thread connecting these diverse authors is an emphasis on practical and concrete solutions to address the challenges, such as lack of access to resources and infrastructure, lack of household decision-making power, and gender biases in policymaking and leadership, still faced by women in agriculture around the world. Ongoing issues in climate change will exacerbate many of these issues and several chapters also address environment and sustainability. This book is of great interest to readers in the areas of gender studies, agriculture, policy studies, environmental studies, development and international studies.

Global Land Grabs

Global Land Grabs
Author: Marc Edelman,Carlos Oya,Saturnino M. Borras Jr.
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 364
Release: 2016-03-22
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781317569503

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Since the 2008 world food crisis a surge of land grabbing swept Africa, Asia and Latin America and even some regions of Europe and North America. Investors have uprooted rural communities for massive agricultural, biofuels, mining, industrial and urbanisation projects. ‘Water grabbing’ and ‘green grabbing’ have further exacerbated social tensions. Early analyses of land grabbing focused on foreign actors, the biofuels boom and Africa, and pointed to catastrophic consequences for the rural poor. Subsequently scholars carried out local case studies in diverse world regions. The contributors to this volume advance the discussion to a new stage, critically scrutinizing alarmist claims of the first wave of research, probing the historical antecedents of today’s land grabbing, examining large-scale land acquisitions in light of international human rights and investment law, and considering anew longstanding questions in agrarian political economy about forms of dispossession and accumulation and grassroots resistance. Readers of this collection will learn about the impacts of land and water grabbing; the relevance of key theorists, including Marx, Polanyi and Harvey; the realities of China’s involvement in Africa; how contemporary land grabbing differs from earlier plantation agriculture; and how social movements—and rural people in general—are responding to this new threat. This book was published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.