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CHINA: Latest Africa Foray: Altruism or Hegemony?
By Antoaneta Bezlova
BEIJING - Brushing off accusations that its investment is denuding Africa of precious natural resources, China has pledged "going all-out" to help African countries overcome poverty and fight new threats like climate change.
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Q&A: "One Can't Work 18 Hours a Day and Still be Poor"
Isolda Agazzi interviews BABACAR NDAO, West African farmer
GENEVA - Given the billions of dollars and euros that the U.S. and EU spend on trade-distorting support measures and the intractable lobby groups demanding these subsidies, these rich states’ promises to reduce such amounts will come to nought. It makes no sense for poor African states to allow these goods to flood their markets.
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URUGUAY: White Concrete Block Replaces Mud, Wattle and Thatch
By Dino Cappelli
PUEBLO BARCELÓ, Uruguay - "If it weren't for the Mevir housing project, this would be a ghost town," says the local shopkeeper who supplies the basic needs of the families living in this remote hamlet in the middle of nowhere in the South American country of Uruguay.
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MEXICO: Women Package the Sweet Taste of Nostalgia
By Emilio Godoy
AYOQUEZCO, Mexico - Years ago, when Catalina Sánchez saw an opportunity to earn an income and improve her family’s living conditions by growing and selling nopales - an edible cactus native to Mexico - she probably never imagined that her idea would spawn three businesses.
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CLIMATE CHANGE: Carbon Trading Welcomed, Criticised
By Jessie Boylan
NIASSA PROVINCE, Mozambique - A visit from Dutch contractors to Niassa Province, in northwestern Mozambique has got communities excited about the prospect of a carbon credit scheme in the area.
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GUATEMALA: (Barely) Surviving on Beans and Tortillas
By Danilo Valladares
GUATEMALA CITY - Juan Manuel Ardón's bones jut out and his hair is dull and thin: signs of severe malnutrition. He is so weak that he can hardly walk or talk, and the doctors say his weight and stature are those of a six-year-old, rather than 15-year-old, boy.
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SIERRA LEONE: New Dawn for Small Farmers?
By Mohamed Fofanah
KAMBIA DISTRICT, Sierra Leone - They call her "Marie Nerica", after a new breed of rice.
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AGRICULTURE-SENEGAL: Groundnut Production in Freefall
By Koffigan E. Adigbli
KAOLACK, Senegal - Farmers are complaining about a lack of technical assistance and the poor quality of seeds they've planted this year in the Kaolack region, Senegal's groundnut-producing area, 200 kilometres south of the capital Dakar.
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UGANDA: Palm Project Accused of Environmental Destruction
By Wambi Michael
KAMPALA - It is a public-private partnership intended to reduce Uganda's dependence on imported vegetable oil while creating sustainable jobs and income for several thousand people. Its critics say it's destroying forests with no regard for environmental regulations.
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ZIMBABWE: Far From the City’s Money, Villagers Barter Again
By Stanley Kwenda
CHITSA, Zimbabwe - In Chitsa, a village with some 2,000 inhabitants located about 250 km from Zimbabwe’s capital of Harare, it has become difficult to conduct everyday transactions involving money.
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EGYPT: A Big Catch Feeds Millions
By Cam McGrath
CAIRO - As the sun rises over the Nile delta, workers at a fish farm in northern Egypt open a sluice gate and sort through the thousands of wriggling tilapia that pour out of a concrete holding tank. The fish are sorted, packed into crates and sent to supermarkets in Cairo and Alexandria, where they are sold as "the catch of the day".
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DEVELOPMENT: Hunger and Conflict Go Hand in Hand
By Suzanne Hoeksema
UNITED NATIONS - Countries emerging from conflict need more international assistance to rebuild their food production, since hunger and scarcity may prompt a return to fighting, United Nations and development officials warned this week.
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COTE D'IVOIRE: Without Better Storage, We Are Farming to Feed Insects
By Fulgence Zamblé
BONDOUKOU, Côte d'Ivoire - Every year, Robert Assalé, a farmer at Tangamourou in the Bondoukou region in east-central Côte d'Ivore, produces an impressive amount of yams. He harvested 30 tonnes in 2007, 42 tonnes in 2008 and has almost surpassed 50 tonnes this year.
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AGRICULTURE-KENYA: Finally, a Windfall for Tea Farmers
By Suleiman Mbatiah
NAIROBI - Despite the sweltering sun and with a heavy load on her back Mary Muthoni strides to the tea buying centre with joy and pride painted on her face. "This is a different year," she smiles, hurriedly greeting other women farmers at the centre. For them, the story is the same: blessings in times of calamity.
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SIERRA LEONE: New Agriculture Plan Sprouts
By Mohamed Fofanah
FREETOWN - When in power, the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) promised that thanks to its pursuit of a pro-agriculture agenda, no Sierra Leonean would go to bed hungry by 2007. But the appointed date came and the people were still hungry. Unfortunately for the SLPP, it was an election year.
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News in RSS The dilemmas inherent in cultivating the soil, producing crops, and raising livestock go beyond the current food crisis. They are about the livelihoods of farmers -- and consumers­ everywhere; about crops and soil, land rights and indigenous peoples, gender, and rural landscape and culture; about animals, biofuels, GMOs, pesticides and fertilisers; about environment and organic production; about trade barriers, corporate farms and subsidies. They are about sustainability. IPS explores this complex topic in our coverage on agriculture.  

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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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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
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