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Violence io the Green Revolution: Agriculture, Ecology and Politics in the South Vandana Shiva English

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi Natraj Publishers 2010Description: 264 p. ; soft bound 14x21 cmISBN:
  • 978-81-8158-148-8
DDC classification:
  • 23 630 SHI
Contents:
Introduction 1. Science and Politics in the Green Revolution 2. 'Miracle Seeds' and the Destruction of Genetic Diversity 3. Chemical Fertilizers and Soil Fertility 4. Intensive Irrigation, Large Dams and Water Conflicts 5. The political and Cultural Costs of the Green Revolution 6. Pepsico for peace? The Ecological and Political Risks of the Biotechnology Revolution 7. The Seed and the Spinning Wheel: The Political Ecology of Technological Change
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Tetso College Library Science and Technology Non-fiction 630 SHI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 14520

As the agricultural systems of many countries are poised, as a result of the recent advances in biotechnology for what may soon come to be called the Second Green Revolution, this book is particularly appropriate. Vandana Shiva examines the impact of the first Green Revolution on the breadbasket of India. In a cogent empirical argument, she shows how the 'quick fix' promise of large gains in output pushed aside serious pursuit of an alternative agricultural strategy grounded in respect for the environmental wisdom of peasant systems and building an egalitarian, needs-prientated agriculture consistent with the village-based, endogenous political traditions of Gandhism. Dr Shiva documents the destruction of genetic diversity and soil fertility that resulted and in highly original fashion shows how the Green Revolution also contributed to the acute social and political conflicts now tearing the Punjab apart.
Set in the context of a sophisticated critique of the privileged epistemological position achieved by modern science, whereby it both aspires to provide technological solutions for social and political problems while at the same time disclaiming responsibility for the new problems which it creates in its wake, the author looks to the future in an analysis of a new project to apply the latest Gene Revolution technology to India and warns of the further environmental and social damage which will ensue.

Introduction
1. Science and Politics in the Green Revolution
2. 'Miracle Seeds' and the Destruction of Genetic Diversity
3. Chemical Fertilizers and Soil Fertility
4. Intensive Irrigation, Large Dams and Water Conflicts
5. The political and Cultural Costs of the Green Revolution
6. Pepsico for peace? The Ecological and Political Risks of the Biotechnology Revolution
7. The Seed and the Spinning Wheel: The Political Ecology of Technological Change

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