Starved for Science

How Biotechnology Is Being Kept Out of Africa

Hardcover, 256 pages

English language

Published March 14, 2008 by Harvard University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-674-02973-6
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5 stars (1 review)

Heading upcountry in Africa to visit small farms is absolutely exhilarating given the dramatic beauty of big skies, red soil, and arid vistas, but eventually the two-lane tarmac narrows to rutted dirt, and the journey must continue on foot. The farmers you eventually meet are mostly women, hardworking but visibly poor. They have no improved seeds, no chemical fertilizers, no irrigation, and with their meager crops they earn less than a dollar a day. Many are malnourished.

Nearly two-thirds of Africans are employed in agriculture, yet on a per-capita basis they produce roughly 20 percent less than they did in 1970. Although modern agricultural science was the key to reducing rural poverty in Asia, modern farm science—including biotechnology—has recently been kept out of Africa.

In Starved for Science Robert Paarlberg explains why poor African farmers are denied access to productive technologies, particularly genetically engineered seeds with improved resistance to insects …

3 editions

Subjects

  • POLITICS & GOVERNMENT
  • Political Science
  • Politics / Current Events
  • Politics/International Relations
  • Biotechnology
  • Environmental Economics
  • International Relations - General
  • Political Science / International Relations
  • Africa
  • Agricultural biotechnology
  • Agriculture and state
  • Crops
  • Genetic engineering

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