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FINANCE: IMF "Cure" for Food Crisis Also a Cause
Analysis by Emad Mekay
WASHINGTON - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says it is responding to the global food crisis by doling out new emergency loans to 15 of the world's poorest nations, mostly in Africa.
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DEVELOPMENT: Food Crisis Rippling Out Like a "Tsunami"
By Nergui Manalsuren
UNITED NATIONS - "A rolling tsunami of social unrest is underway as we speak - hungry people are desperate people capable of taking desperate actions. This tsunami is rapidly enveloping the global South, and it won't take much longer before it knocks at the door of the global North," warned Vicente Garcia-Delgado, the U.N. representative for CIVICUS, the world alliance for citizen participation.
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BRAZIL: Leading Agroscience Has Few Links to Small Farmers
By Mario Osava*
RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil has the most advanced agricultural science and technology system of the world's tropical countries, with an array of environmental and high-production solutions, but which rarely reach their intended target: the small farmer.
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DEVELOPMENT: More Fears Rise Around Doha Deal
By Aileen Kwa
GENEVA - As WTO negotiations pick up this week, some developing countries are in growing doubt that a deal liberalising their economies further could help them cope with the food crisis.
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CAMBODIA: Seeing Opportunity in Rising Food Prices
By Andrew Nette
PHNOM PENH - Cambodian government sees opportunity for this impoverished country in the global rise in food prices that could help turn the fortunes for its agrarian economy.
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TRADE-AFRICA: EPA Threatens to Tear Apart Oldest Customs Union
By Aileen Kwa*
GENEVA - The fate of the world’s oldest customs union, the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), is hanging in the balance as a result of the economic partnership agreements that most SACU countries have signed with the European Union (EU).
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PERU: Women - The Guardians of Potato Biodiversity
By Milagros Salazar
HUAMA, Cuzco, Peru - In South America’s Andes mountain region, indigenous women have traditionally been responsible for selecting, conserving and managing seed potatoes from the countless native varieties of the crop, thus ensuring diversity and continued production while contributing to food security among their people.
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IRAQ: Nature Adds to Occupation Blows
By Ahmed Ali and Dahr Jamail*
BAQUBA - Farmers in the Diyala province in Iraq have been hit by just about every crisis possible. First the security disaster dried up supplies and markets, then lack of electricity cut irrigation, and now comes a drying up of water resources.
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LATIN AMERICA: Food Price Inflation Threatens Children
By Daniela Estrada*
SANTIAGO - Child malnutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean will be aggravated by global food shortages, even though the region produces much more food than it consumes, say experts and officials.
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DEVELOPMENT: Sweden, Ireland, Britain Lead in Aiding Africa
By Emad Mekay
WASHINGTON - Sweden, Ireland and Britain top an index of 21 rich countries that ranks their commitment to help develop African nations. The United States, the world's largest economy, was a distant thirteenth, while Japan remains the least committed to the continent among rich nations.
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CUBA: ‘Green’ Farming Techniques to Boost Production
By Patricia Grogg
POZO REDONDO, Cuba - The application of agroecological techniques and the salvaging of traditional farming methods have revolutionised food production in rural areas along the southern edge of the Cuban capital.
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DEVELOPMENT: Can Sorghum Solve the Biofuels Dilemma?
By Stephen Leahy
KORCULA, Croatia - A new crop that provides food, animal feed and fuel at the same time promises to help developing countries redirect money spent on oil imports to benefit their own farmers. Is sweet sorghum biofuel's "holy grail"?
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EUROPE: Subsidies Fail the Poor Among the Rich
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Romanian farmers have started receiving the first payments under the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). But the poorest farmers might have to wait years to see some benefits.
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TRADE: Doha Talks Sweating Over Tropical Products
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - The hot potato these days in the Doha Round of World Trade Organisation (WTO) negotiations is tropical products, a burning issue for the world’s poorest countries.
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IRAQ: Food Crisis Hits Fallujah
By Ali al-Fadhily and Dahr Jamail*
FALLUJAH - Sharp increases in food prices have generated a new wave of anti-occupation and anti-U.S. sentiment in Fallujah.
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DEVELOPMENT: Food Crisis Symptom of Dubious Liberalisation
Analysis by Aileen Kwa
GENEVA - The high food prices that have sparked riots in many parts of the developing world - from Indonesia, India and Bangladesh to Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire and Haiti - should come as no surprise. These are only the latest in a series of events many developing countries have suffered as a result of opening their borders and neglecting domestic agriculture.
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BRAZIL: Sugarcane Alcohol Tarnished by U.S. Maize Ethanol
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Recent efforts by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to clearly mark the difference between Brazilian ethanol and the agrofuels produced by the United States are an admission that signing an agreement with Washington to promote a global bioethanol market was a serious political mistake, say analysts.
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DEVELOPMENT-AFRICA: "Political Will" Needed To Address Food Crisis
By Kwamboka Oyaro
NAIROBI - The need to give agriculture top billing on governmental "to do" lists has been highlighted at a telephone briefing to discuss the current food crisis as it affects Africa.
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News in RSS More than 800 million people suffer hunger today. A new global effort has been launched to solve this complex problem and find ways to double food production in 25 to 50 years in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner under the conditions of climate change.

Impossible?

For the first time NGOs, governments, research institutions, consumer and farmer organisations and the private sector are working as equals to determine the necessary ingredients for food security at the local level through the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD). Their aim is to reshape approaches to food security issues, based on science, technology and traditional knowledge.
 

Facts on Agriculture & Development GreenFacts' summary of the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development IAASTD.
 
Is it Possible to Reduce World Hunger and Protect the Environment? Video IAASTD - Webcast from the Foreign Press Association 15th April 2008
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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News in RSS
WHAT'S BEHIND SOARING COMMODITY PRICES
    by Jose Graziano da Silva

MAKING HIGH COMMODITY PRICES HELP THE POOREST NATIONS
    by Ali Mchumo

SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE: INVESTING IN SUSTENANCE
    by Hans R. Herren

LATIN AMERICA: REBIRTH OF THE AGRARIAN AGENDA
    by Jose Graziano da Silva

FOOD SOVEREIGNTY FOR LATIN AMERICA
    by Joao Pedro Stedile
Int'l Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development
IAASTD NGO Discussion Site
COM+
World Bank Report 2008: Agriculture for Development
Via Campesina
Third World Network Africa
 
Bob Watson, Director of IAASTD, interview on feeding the world

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