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In print

The revenge of Gaia The revenge of Gaia

By James Lovelock
Published by Allen Lane
Website: www.penguin.com
2006, 189pp, ISBN 0713999144 (Hb), £16.99

A master of metaphor, Lovelock likens human civilisation's current situation to passengers on a pleasure boat cruising above Niagara Falls, unaware that their engine is about to fail. We are in extreme danger. Global warming and rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are threatening the natural systems that our planet uses to maintain conditions for life. We may, unknowingly, have already passed a tipping point; the polar ice-caps, which have acted as a giant sun reflector, are being replaced with heat absorbing sea. And if we are to have any chance of limiting the damage, counsels Lovelock, we will have to put the interests of the Earth before our own.

Unfortunately, many of the current prescriptions to heal our ailing world may be counterproductive. Continued economic growth, even through 'sustainable development' is hopeless. Nor should we put our faith in renewable energies, such as biofuels. We would need the land area of several planets to grow enough biofuel for our transport needs alone, and cultivating energy crops destroys more of the natural ecosystems that the Earth needs to maintain its health. Other sources, such as wind power, could be important in the future but are currently too expensive and too inefficient. Our civilisation depends on electricity, and to obtain it without adding more carbon dioxide to our atmosphere, we need to use nuclear power.

Lovelock is passionate about science, and the need to redirect our technical skills to the interests of our planet, rather than ourselves. He reports, without cynicism, on some technological fixes to reduce temperature at a global level, including a giant sun-screen erected in space, and a system to create clouds over the world's oceans. He frequently challenges our basic assumptions, advocating for example, that sulphur should be reintroduced to aircraft fuel, so that jet aircraft can help to build a light-reflecting haze in the atmosphere. In the context of nuclear power, he offers to store a year's worth of high level waste from one power station in his own garden, so negligible a risk does he think it would pose.

His ideas about how our future civilisation might look are equally radical. On our present path we are heading for a post-apocalyptic world ruled by tribal warlords whose people scratch a living in the few hospitable areas that remain. A better alternative is for a much reduced population, living in well-designed urban areas and eating synthesised food. Can civilisation be saved? In his final chapter, Lovelock notes that in military circles, quality of generalship is measured by the ability to carry out a successful retreat. Humankind needs to organise just such a retreat while we still have the time and energy. But it will depend not just on good leadership, but personal sacrifice at a global level. Radical, memorable, eccentric, The revenge of Gaia may enrage or depress you, but it will certainly make you think.

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Livestock and wealth creation Livestock and wealth creation: Improving the husbandry of animals kept by resource- poor people in developing countries

Edited by E Owen et al.
Published by Nottingham University Press
Website: www.nup.com
2005, 613pp, ISBN 1 904761 32 1(Pb), £40

The principle that livestock offer a pathway out of poverty has been common currency for some years, not least in the context of the increasing consumption of animal products, known as the 'livestock revolution'. But, say the editors of this new text book, in academic circles there is still the need for a dramatic change of mindset when it comes to livestock and the poor. Drawing on the experience of over 100 contributors from developed and developing countries, this comprehensive text book examines the role of livestock-keeping in the lives of poor communities. As such, it takes care to emphasise that livestock development among the poor demands a holistic approach; changes in husbandry must be considered in the context of the wider system in which livestock exist.

The first half of the book examines a number of cross-cutting issues that determine patterns and practices of livestock-keeping. These include the relationships between livestock and the environment, feeding practices, the value of livestock products and the role of marketing. The second half focuses on particular species – from bees to yaks - setting out current production methods in different parts of the developing world, and opportunities for improvement. The chapter on poultry, for example, draws on a research project in Zimbabwe, where use of a sunflower-residue feed had a marked effect on productivity in village chickens. Another poultry study in Indonesia showed how provision of night housing, vaccination against Newcastle disease and some supplementary feeding dramatically decreased mortality and increased egg production.

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Plan B: Rescuing a planet under stress and a civilisation in trouble Plan B 2.0: Rescuing a planet under stress and a civilisation in trouble

By Lester R Brown
Published by WW Norton
Website: www.earth-policy.org
2006, 352pp, ISBN 0393328317 (Pb), £10.99

 

While the capitalist market is a highly efficient system for allocating resources and balancing supply and demand it is, according to Brown, fundamentally flawed, and as a result is driving our civilisation to the point of collapse. The market fails in not incorporating indirect, environmental costs into the price of goods and services and not respecting the sustainable-yield threshold of natural systems. It also tends to be short term, showing little concern for future generations. And, with humankind's sevenfold economic expansion since the 1950s, failure to address these shortcomings is likely to be disastrous. Moreover, the growing recognition that China's economic growth, if based on the western economic model, would be unsustainable, increases the urgency of finding an alternative, a Plan B.

Well-travelled, well-read and well connected, Brown is a highly readable guide to our planet's ills – and the solutions. He first sets out the evidence for a civilisation in trouble, from rising temperatures and environmental degradation to a post oil peak energy crisis. He describes the 'food bubble economy' that he believes characterises agriculture in some of the world's most populous countries, including China, India, Mexico and Pakistan. Here, productivity is being achieved only by unsustainable use of water resources, particularly groundwater. But while Brown is dogged in his depiction of a world in trouble, he is not a doom merchant. All the technologies and strategies we need to put the economy on a healthy environmental path are, he argues, already known and in many cases are already being applied. He cites environmental tax shifts in Germany and Sweden, and major breakthroughs in animal protein production in India and China, in dairying and fish farming. For those unfamiliar with Brown's work, this second edition of Plan B is strongly recommended as a challenging, thought-provoking and inspiring read.

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The Coffee Paradox The Coffee Paradox

By Benoit Daviron and Stefano Ponte
Published by Zed Books
Website: www.zedbooks.co.uk
2005, 319pp, ISBN 1 84277 457 3(Pb), £16.95

Over two billion cups of coffee are consumed each day. Yet despite booming consumption, world market prices for coffee remain low. What lies behind this distinction, say the authors, relates primarily to the 'identity' of coffee. Cafes and restaurants in the developed world, for example, sell more than just 'good' coffee; they sell social positioning and an ambience as well. Unable to directly target the consumer, producers cannot reap the rewards of this highly lucrative market share. In effect, they are cut out of the global value chain. The authors ask whether 'trading out of poverty' is therefore a feasible goal, as producing countries are selling commodities that are "valued only for their material quality attributes." Aimed at academics and researchers, the Coffee Paradox raises interesting questions, using the example of coffee to explore a complex, but important subject.

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Biotechnology, Agriculture and Food Security in Southern Africa Biotechnology, Agriculture and Food Security in Southern Africa

Edited by Steven Were Omamo and Klaus Von Grebmer
Published by IFPRI
Can be ordered or downloaded from http://www.ifpri.org/pubs/books/oc46.htm
2005, 297pp, ISBN 0 89629 737 3(Pb), free

Defining biotechnology as "any technological application that uses biological systems, living organisms... to make or modify products or processes for specific use.", this publication from the International Food Policy Research Institute offers a brief introduction to key issues surrounding the debate on genetically modified organisms (GMOs), and a detailed analysis of why the introduction of GMOs into agricultural systems is particularly controversial. Many complex but crucial questions relating to politics, ethics and intellectual property rights are raised. Should a southern country accept an 'untested' new technology that has been vehemently rejected in Europe, just because it is desperate? What is the evidence that 'enhanced' crops will not have negative consequences, or infect traditional crop varieties? If biotechnology is accepted in the South, will its exports be excluded from Europe. The book is academic and heavily factual, but an excellent guide through the red tape and controversy surrounding agriculture and biotechnology.

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Traditional resource rights and indigenous people in the Andes Traditional resource rights and indigenous people in the Andes

Published by IIED
Available from Earthprint
Website: www.earthprint.com
2005, 12pp, ISBN 1 84369 571 5(Pb), US$7

Agricultural biodiversity in the Andes is extraordinary. In this complex and risk-prone environment, Quechua farmers, over hundreds of years, have bred an amazing range of crop varieties to exploit the ecological niches that characterise their mountain land. A single plot may contain over a hundred varieties of potato. But biodiversity, central to local food systems and livelihood, faces many threats, including inappropriate agricultural policies, the erosion of traditional knowledge and the lack of clear rights over genetic resources. This booklet documents the activities of indigenous farmers who, with support from the IIED and local partner ANDES (the Quechua-Aymara Association for Sustainable Livelihoods), have worked to strengthen and protect their crops and management practices.

Their achievements have been impressive. They include the establishment of a 'Community Conserved Area' called the Potato Park, where biodiversity and the socio-cultural systems that nurtured it are protected. Under the project, community-to-community learning networks have been established to exchange knowledge and innovations, and in response to a request by communities the government in Peru has created a National Day of the Potato. Another significant development has been the signing of a 'repatriation' agreement with the International Potato Center (CIP), which gives the communities access to the genetic material kept in the centre's genebank, and promotes their role in in situ conservation of potato biodiversity. This short publication offers an accessible overview of the project's work in Peru, but would benefit from the inclusion of some comments from the communities involved.

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Domesticating forests: How farmers manage forest resources Domesticating forests: How farmers manage forest resources

By Genevieve Michon
Published by CIFOR/ICRAF
Email: icrafseapub@cgiar.org
Can be downloaded or ordered from: http://www.worldagroforestry.org/sea/Publications/searchpub.asp?publishid=1100
2005, 187pp, ISBN 979 3198 222 (Pb), free

In the forested islands of Indonesia, situated between cleared farmland and natural, primary forests, there are some 6-8 million hectares of farmland used by local communities to cultivate tree species. These areas, planted over generations on land cleared by slash-and-burn agriculture, look like natural forest; they are rich in animal and plant life and have a similar mix of local species. But in local languages they are never referred to as forests; their various names are much closer to the English 'garden', and for those that manage them, they are central to their livelihoods. Most of Indonesia's rubber, resins, tree spices, fruits and nuts come from these planted forests.

As the case studies in this book illustrate, these systems have been very successful, ecologically, economically and socially. However, they are also under threat, not least because the fact that they are planted, has largely gone unrecognised. As a result they are frequently classified as natural forest, with the same restrictions on communities, in terms of management, harvesting and local trade in forest products. This book aims to raise awareness about the comparative advantages of farmer-cultivated forests, to increase their recognition by both forest researchers and policy-makers. It also examines the benefits of the Indonesian systems compared to traditional forest extraction and specialised forest plantation. Featuring many excellent photographs, Domesticating forests is an attractive and important book that deserves consideration by all involved in forest management.

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Non-Formal Education for Training in Integrated Pest Production and Pest Management in Farmer Field Schools Non-Formal Education for Training in Integrated Pest Production and Pest Management in Farmer Field Schools

By Albert D.K. Amedzro and Anthony Youdeowei
Published by Ghana Universities Press
Distributed by African Books Collective
Email: abc@africanbookscollective.com
Website: www.africanbookscollective.com
2005, 118pp, ISBN 9964 3 0314 9(Pb), £16.95

For Farmer Field Schools on Integrated Production and Pest Management (IPPM) in Ghana, this is a guide to enable trainers to incorporate principles from non-formal education. The introductory chapter explains that the main objective of the guide, and of IPPM training, is to empower farmers to make their own decisions about which corrective actions to take and when. As a result, they should not have to rely on adopting technologies or packages 'blindly', but can test and adopt new strategies to address problems in their own environments.

The guide is intended to assist an understanding of how adults learn, and how sustainable farmer groups can be formed. Ideas should be modified to local contexts, although the authors note that conditions in Ghana are to a large extent similar to others in West Africa. It is divided into ten chapters, covering subjects such as the communication process, leadership, effective teamwork, and how to 'brighten' your training sessions. Learning tools within the book include discussion questions, role plays, problem-solving tasks, pictures and diagrams.

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Sowing Autonomy: Gender and seed politics in semi-arid India Sowing Autonomy: Gender and seed politics in semi-arid India

By Carine Pionetti
Published by IIED
Available from Earthprint
Website: www.earthprint.com
2005, 258pp, ISBN 1 843 69562 6 (Pb), US$30.50

Combining political ecology and field-based research, Sowing autonomy emphasises the integral connection between seed saving and self-reliance in seed, crop diversity and nutrition. For millennia, farmers in India have developed farming practices adapted to their local conditions, including multiple varieties of staple crops such as rice, potatoes, sorghum and wheat. Over the past five decades however, commercial seeds and market regulations have dominated seed production. This book addresses the undermining impact on the role of women in seed management, and the implications for seed diversity.

To explore these threats, Pionetti provides a case study of farming systems in the Deccan Plateau in South India. Drawing on first hand experience, she offers a unique perspective on agriculture that is accessible to those unfamiliar with the field, as well as being an interesting and informative account for experts. The lay out is clean and easy to read, and the text is supported by diagrams, photographs and boxes of explanatory information.

1st May 2006

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