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As events following the September 11th attack on New York and Washington have unfolded, there has been increasing recognition that extreme poverty, hunger and a sense of hopelessness provide ideal conditions for disaffection, crime, instability and even terrorism. The landless, the uneducated, unemployed and destitute provide the 'foot soldiers' of conflicts from Somalia and Sudan to Sierra Leone, and from the Philippines to Colombia. This month, New Agriculturist features reports, opinions, and books on some of the factors that keep the poor, poor and the hungry, hungry; what is required to significantly reduce hunger and what is at stake if we fail to do so. Points of View features opinions from the international conference "Sustainable Food Security for All by 2020" hosted by IFPRI the week before the tragic events in the US, and includes the IFPRI Director General's prescient comment that "a world with a small number of rich people and a large number of poor people will not be stable. And that is what we are heading for as we speak." The focus of Focus on are the self-help, low cost technologies that can ameliorate declining soil fertility, itself an underlying contributor to hunger and poverty. While in Perspective, Senator Sartaj Aziz of Pakistan, after a lifetime in the UN and domestic politics, reflects on the subsidies to OECD farmers, the tariffs and the trade barriers that stand between many countries and their attempts to increase agricultural productivity and so reduce poverty and hunger. In Print leads with a book which examines the role of desertification in culture and world history, not least in Islam, "The gardens of their dreams".. Control measures for cattle, sheep and pig diseases feature in News, as do a blight resistant potato and using potato starch to make disposable packaging. And our Developments reports include a new approach to consensus building where there is conflict of interest over resources. As always, we hope that our pages provide food for thought as well as elements of practical application for agricultural development. Please let us know if you experience any problems with accessing New Agriculturist. Please also suggest topics that you would like to see covered in future editions and send us your suggestions for making New Agriculturist even easier to use. To access an earlier edition of New Agriculturist visit the back issue page. Here we provide access to all articles in previous editions of New Agriculturist. The latest information on courses and conferences is contained in the current edition only. Alternatively if you are looking for an article on a specific subject, you can also search the site. To suggest a subject for a future edition of the New Agriculturist, or to offer material to us, please use our suggestions page. Interacting with New Agriculturist You are free to print copies of the articles contained within the New Agriculturist and distribute them to those who do not have internet access. Articles may also be used in other publications on the condition that New Agriculturist is credited as the source of the material, and a sample is sent to WRENmedia. For all other uses please ask permission of the authors. Photographs are from the photo library of WRENmedia unless otherwise stated and may only be duplicated with express permission. Please contact Susanna Thorp for further information. Organizations and companies wishing to display services in New Agriculturist and to be linked with this site should contact Patrick Harvey. For information on WRENmedia services, simply click on the logo below. Editorial team: Webmaster: The authors of the New Agriculturist do not guarantee the accuracy of the information contained in the New Agriculturist, nor do they accept responsibility for errors or omissions or their consequences. The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of WRENmedia. |
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