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Home > New from GRAIN  > 10-2008 - Seedling October 2008

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New from GRAIN
08 October 2008

Seedling October 2008

IN THIS ISSUE...

The "global food crisis", as a hot topic, has disappeared from the headlines of most of the world's press. Now that speculators have made a killing, prices are falling from the heady heights they reached at the beginning of 2008. Back to business as usual, it might seem. But this is not the case. Because the crisis was erroneously defined in most of the world's media as being a "crisis of production" (when it was in fact largely caused by speculation and the deregulation of world trade), the World Bank, the European Commission, the United Nations, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Red Cross and others are falling over themselves to fund programmes to "boost production". And the way to do this, say these bodies, is to bring in from outside "modern" and "productive" hybrid seeds (and, further down the line almost certainly, genetically modified seeds). As we argue in our introductory article, this is not the way forward. Bringing in seeds from outside undermines local seed systems, erodes seed diversity and creates dependency. Moreover, big corporations use seed aid as a means to gain a foothold in a new market. Yet again a crisis is being used to further the interests of agribusiness.

What happens to small farmers when they have an alien system forced upon them is spelt out in detail in an important article on the former "homeland areas" of Transkei and Ciskei in South Africa's Eastern Cape, where the Green Revolution, new-style, has been in operation for five years. The programme, drawn up without consultation with local communities, has been a resounding failure. Farmers have been compelled to implement foreign technologies and farming systems. They have been told that their seeds and their knowledge are worthless. They have exposed themselves, their livestock and their soil to damaging chemicals. They have been trapped in debt. Not surprisingly, many farmers believe that they have no option but sit it out until the government tires and they can go back to the way they farmed before. There are really important lessons to be learnt from this experience. But will the agencies and the authorities listen?

In this struggle to preserve local knowledge and local communities, all opportunities have to be grasped. One such chance has arisen with the collapse of the World Trade Organisation's Doha round. With this, the negotiating mandate for the proposed amendment on the patenting of life under TRIPS got "washed away" too. This amendment, proposed by several developing countries, didn't challenge the concept of patenting life, but merely modified it, so that developing countries would gain some financial benefit. We have long argued that it is the principle itself that is wrong. As we say in the short article, social movements and activists now have another chance to put pressure on their governments to oppose the "privatisation of life".

Over the centuries communities have developed a strong attachment to the ecosystems they inhabit. Their relationship with local biodiversity is saturated with magic-religious beliefs. In our interview in this edition, Ulrich Oslender, a political geographer from the University of Glasgow in Scotland, UK, talks of the culture of the Afro-Colombian communities that inhabit Colombia's extraordinarily diverse Pacific coast. For them the forest is inhabited by mythical figures and spirits, including the tunda and the riviel. It is this rich culture, just as important in its way as the biodiversity, that gets destroyed when paramilitary gangs invade the region and clear the communities off the land to make way for large-scale mining and farming projects.

But agribusiness and mining corporations are not having it all their own way, as is clear from this interview and other articles in this edition. Peasant farmers in Benin are developing their own dignified and calm form of resistance by quietly carrying on with their traditional way of life, despite the sales onslaught from multinational corporations. And in Bangladesh farming families are developing new ways of protecting their local biodiversity, particularly chickens and goats, while increasing their incomes. Here, too, it is not just a question of defending their livelihoods but also of fostering ananda – the joy of living.

In the home page of this edition, we have a short article on Biodiversidad, our sister Spanish-language publication. As Carlos Vicente, in charge GRAIN's information work in Latin America, explains, the magazine is expanding and evolving, in response to the demands of a highly politicised continent. It is a clear example of the way in which GRAIN, working in many different regions of the world, is changing and adapting, just like the ecosystems and communities with which it works.

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SEEDLING OCTOBER 2008
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=563

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=563&pdf
Download the whole issue of Seedling in PDF here.

SEED AID, AGRIBUSINESS AND THE FOOD CRISIS by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=564

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=564&pdf
The world food crisis, rapidly defined by those in power as a problem of insufficient production, has become a trojan horse to get corporate seeds, fertilisers and, surreptitiously, market systems into poor countries. As past experience shows, what looks like "seed aid" in the short term can mask what is actually "agribusiness aid" in the long term. We look at what is going on.

TRIPS - CLOSE CALL IN GENEVA by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=565

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=565&pdf
The collapse of the WTO talks has somewhat unexpectedly created a further opportunity to fight a last ditch battle against the proposed patenting of life in the TRIPS Agreement. The patenting of life is a fundamental negation of the way in which countless generations of rural communities around the world have protected their biodiversity and handed down knowledge about it. Under their stewardship biodiversity and knowledge have evolved and adapted. Privatising these precious resources would threaten the very basis on which society has sustained itself for millennia.

RESISTING TRANSNATIONALS – THE EXPERIENCE OF FARMING FAMILIES IN SOUTH-WEST BENIN by JINUKUN, Synergie Paysanne, GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=566

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=566&pdf
For several decades now, the multinationals have been trying, one way or another, to control the way Africa uses its genetic resources, especially its seeds. Among the strategies they have used has been: to introduce chemical inputs, with all the problems these create; to sponsor national and/or regional laws, mostly copied from European models; and to implement programmes such as the US-backed African Growth and Opportunity Act and the Millennium Challenge Account. Local communities, however, are resisting in a calm and dignified manner by transmitting from generation to generation their own cultural practices. Some examples gathered during a trip to south-west Benin show how communities are still able to control their seed use and to manage their genetic resources.

ULRICH OSLENDER Interview by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=567

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=567&pdf
Ulrich Oslender, a political geographer at the University of Glasgow, has carried out research into social movements and spaces of resistance in Latin America. He currently works as an EU-funded Marie Curie Research Fellow investigating the forced displacement of Afro-Colombians from Colombia's Pacific coast region, which he explains through a methodological framework he calls "geographies of terror". Since the mid-1990s, he has conducted extensive fieldwork in Colombia and has worked closely with the social movement of the country's black communities. He can be reached at: Ulrich.Oslender@ges.gla.ac.uk

LESSONS FROM A GREEN REVOLUTION IN SOUTH AFRICA by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=568

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=568&pdf
The latest rescue plan for Africa is another Green Revolution. GRAIN, alongside a host of others, has written and commented extensively on the Alliance for a Green Revolution for Africa (AGRA) and the impact it will have on the continent. In the meantime, this model of a Green Revolution has already been implemented for the past five years in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. It provides us with a case study and an indication of the likely outcome of such an approach in other parts of Africa.

SEEDS FOR TOMORROW by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=569

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=569&pdf
UBINIG in Bangladesh not only helps in the exchange of rice varieties, but also in the breeding of local animals such as chickens and cows.

SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIENCES SHARED IN LEISA MAGAZINE by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=570

SEEDS OF INFORMATION by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=571

BIODIVERSIDAD - SEEDLING'S SISTER MAGAZINE IN LATIN by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=572

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=572&pdf


   

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