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THIS
MONTH'S
THEME
Food and farming

The new peasants’ revolt
Katharine Ainger takes issue with a model of agriculture that’s turning small farmers from stewards of the land into servants.

Food sovereignty
The outlines of a new agricultural paradigm.

How (not) to feed Africa
As famine stalks Africa Tewolde Berhan Gebre Egziabher
demands a rethink about food aid, small farms, genetic
modification and debt.

Tricks of the trade
The rules of the global trading system – who makes them and why, as they apply to rice, meat, dairy products, sugar, wheat, coffee and genetically modified soya and maize.

Robin Hood in reverse
The 2002 Farm Bill pumps a $250-billion subsidy into
big farming business in the US. The losers, says
Anuradha Mittal, are almost everyone else.

Tainted tortillas
Maize in Mexico has been contaminated by genetically
modified organisms. Tania Molina Ramírez reports on
a scandal – and what the ‘people of maize’ are doing
about it.

FOOD AND FARMING – THE FACTS

The market and the monsoon
In a special report from the state of Andhra Pradesh
in India, Katharine Ainger looks through the dust
and the desperation at Vision 2020 – a plan to
remove 20 million people from their land.

Cutting the wire
The Landless Movement (MST) in Brazil came to prominence by occupying land. Now, reports Sue Branford, the movement’s getting serious about sustainable farming, too.

Farming solutions
Tracing the practical steps already being taken in Japan, the Philippines, Laos, China, Kenya, Madagascar, Tunisia, Brazil, Argentina and Germany.

The magic bean
The way forward, says Jules Pretty, involves learning from
the 350,000 generations of farmers, not just the last two generations of industry.

The delicious revolution (or what you can do)

The World Chronicle 2002

Ten Myths About World Hunger
Wall poster explaining the 10 biggest myths about
the World Hunger crisis. Available as an Acrobat PDF file.
Click here to download the free PDF reader if you don't have it installed on your computer.

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FROM THIS MONTH'S EDITOR

Photo: Katharine Ainger
Photo: Katharine Ainger

Katharine Ainger CHARLES DE GAULLE once said of
France: ‘How can you govern a
country that has 246 varieties of
cheese?’ Diversity in food and
farming systems has never been so
popular with the public, and yet so far
off the policy agenda. Too often those
who question industrial agriculture
are blackmailed into silence by
accusations that they are denying
progress to the malnourished poor.

Famine is caused by many factors –
war, debt, poverty, soil degradation,
unequal terms of trade... never by
asking questions. As famine threatens
millions in Southern Africa, and even
greater numbers suffer daily
malnourishment in South Asia, asking
difficult political questions is more,
not less of a duty.

Why did the International
Monetary Fund tell Malawi to slash
its grain reserves? Should
corporations patent staple food
crops? Is a free-trade economy that
takes control away from the majority
of rural people really the best model
we’ve got?

Voices – many belonging to activist
farmers from the South – speaking of
diverse agricultural alternatives have
been left out of these discussions for
far too long.

Pass the cheese.

The editor's signature.

Katharine Ainger
for the New Internationalist
Co-operative
kat@newint.org

REGULAR
FEATURES

 

 

Desmond Tutu

Letters
Relief of Americans in exile; indigenous peoples and ‘swamping’ by immigrants; Israel: end the occupation and forget the past.
PLUS: Letter from Lebanon by Reem Haddad.

Obituary
Professor Arno Peters.

Southern Exposure
The dancer’s silhouette: a picture from Indonesia by the Filipino photographer Rolex de la Pena.

View from the South
Nobel Peace Prizewinner Archbishop Desmond Tutu argues that it is time for us to treat Israel as we once treated apartheid South Africa.

Currents
The ‘collateral’ damage: meet some of the ordinary Iraqis that your government is planning to bomb. PLUS: El Salvador’s healthcare workers battle privatization.
PLUS: Word Corner - Caravan.
PLUS: Big Bad World cartoonist Polyp
on the power of the media.

Jumbo NI Prize Crossword – with a special food-and-farming theme and a bumper prize on offer.

Mixed media
Reviewed in mixed mediaThe best films, books and music of 2002 along with the new reviews.
FILM: Divine Intervention directed by Elia Suleiman; The Summit by Nick Francis and Max Pugh; 11’9”01 – September 11 by Alain Brigand.
MUSIC: The Fire This Time by various artists; Jerusalem by Steve Earle.
BOOKS: A Guide to the Perplexed by Gilad Atzmon; The Screaming of the Innocent by Unity Dow; A Map of the Gardens by Gillian Mears.

Country Profile - China

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Front cover: Sukree Sukplang / Reuters
Magazine designed by: Alan Hughes
On-line mag maintained by: Simon Loffler
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