USAID: Making the world hungry for GM crops by GRAIN | 25 Apr 2005 This briefing examines how the US government uses USAID to actively promote GM agriculture. The focus is on USAID's major programmes for agricultural biotechnology and the regions where these programmes are most active in parts of Africa and Asia[1]. These USAID programmes are part of a multi-pronged strategy to advance US interests with GM crops. Increasingly the US government uses multilateral and bilateral free trade agreements and high-level diplomatic pressure to push countries towards the adoption of many key bits of corporate-friendly regulations related to GM crops. And this external pressure has been effectively complimented by lobbying and funding from national and regional USAID biotech networks. This briefing examines how the US government uses USAID to actively promote GM agriculture. The focus is on USAID's major programmes for agricultural biotechnology and the regions where these programmes are most active in parts of Africa and Asia[1]. These USAID programmes are part of a multi-pronged strategy to advance US interests with GM crops. Increasingly the US government uses multilateral and bilateral free trade agreements and high-level diplomatic pressure to push countries towards the adoption of many key bits of corporate-friendly regulations related to GM crops. And this external pressure has been effectively complimented by lobbying and funding from national and regional USAID biotech networks.
USAID in Africa: 'For the American Corporations' by GRAIN | 24 Apr 2005 Seedling - April 2005 This article examines how the US government uses the International Agency for Development (USAID) to advance a global agenda for GM agriculture. The focus is on USAID’s major programmes for agricultural biotechnology in Africa. This article examines how the US government uses the International Agency for Development (USAID) to advance a global agenda for GM agriculture. The focus is on USAID’s major programmes for agricultural biotechnology in Africa.
No, air, don't sell yourself.... by GRAIN | 22 Apr 2005 Seedling - April 2005 The concept of “environmental services” has become popular over the last decade and has crept insidiously into our collective consciousness without setting off the alarm bells it should have done. Environmental services pro-vide the means of taking privatisation to a new level – a means of privatising many things that have as-yet been unavailable for privatisation: air, water and all sorts of other ecological processes. What has been undertaken so far in the name of environmental services, and what are the implications of turning such basic elements into commodities? The concept of “environmental services” has become popular over the last decade and has crept insidiously into our collective consciousness without setting off the alarm bells it should have done. Environmental services pro-vide the means of taking privatisation to a new level – a means of privatising many things that have as-yet been unavailable for privatisation: air, water and all sorts of other ecological processes. What has been undertaken so far in the name of environmental services, and what are the implications of turning such basic elements into commodities?
Resolution adopted at the FOE-Africa/TWN Conference on GMOs and Africa, 21-23 March 2005, Lagos, Nigeria by | 21 Apr 2005
A Global Week of Action against GM, in Andhra Pradesh, India by GRAIN & DDS | 20 Apr 2005 Seedling - April 2005
Push for GM papaya continues in Thailand and South-East Asia by GRAIN & BioThai | 18 Apr 2005 Seedling - April 2005
Indigenous peoples oppose National Geographic & IBM research project by GRAIN | 13 Apr 2005 BIO-IPR (1997-2009)
The Siem Reap Statement by | 7 Apr 2005 A collective farmers' statement condemning the top-down model of agricultural research A collective farmers' statement condemning the top-down model of agricultural research
What Is Food Sovereignty? by Via Campesina | 1 Apr 2005 Via Campesina's position paper on food sovereignty Via Campesina's position paper on food sovereignty
Tanzania gov't looks to Bt cotton to expand cotton area, while country mired in surplus production by Various articles | 23 Mar 2005