Food's Frontier: The Next Green Revolution

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Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Oct 30, 2000 - Technology & Engineering - 272 pages

An eye-opening look at how the world will feed itself in the coming decades

By now it is clear that the techniques of the first "Green Revolution" that averted mass starvation a generation ago --pesticides, chemical fertilizers, focusing on a few key crops--are threatening the food supply for future generations. Interestingly, the solution to this dilemma seems most likely to emerge from the still-developing world, where alternative methods and philosophies, based on indigenous knowledge and native crops as well as genetic engineering and other technological advances, are still possible.
Richard Manning reports on this emerging Green Revolution, placing it in social and political context, and presenting some surprising and controversial solutions to this most pressing environmental problem.

 

Contents

Title Page
An Island in Africa Global Methods Local Choices
How Things Fall Apart When Politics Pushes People Against
To Work in Peace Visionaries in Violent Times
From Basket Case to Bread Basket When Biotechnology
The Critical Mass The Fate of Farming in an Industrializing
Genetic Revolution Bioengineering on the Loose
Forging a Magic Bullet Technology Based in Biodiversity
In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World Sustaining
Roots Restoring Rural Wisdom
The Genie in the Genome Bioengineering in Context
A Common Ground Food Cities and the Integrity of Rural
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About the author (2000)

Richard Manning is the author of Last Stand, A Good House, Grassland, and One Round River. He lives in Montana.

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