Can Agricultural Biotechnology be Pro?Poor?
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Ian Scoones* A recent well-publicised book, by the directorgeneral of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and World Food Prize winner, Per Pinstrup-Andersen, opens with a story. The story is one of a ‘skinny three-year-old girl’ who ‘lay dying on a mat, surrounded by crying relatives’ in a village in south-western Zimbabwe during the summer of 1999. The imagery is powerful, the story familiar from media reports of famine in Africa and the conclusion (to what is promoted as a ‘balanced’ and ‘unemotional’ perspective) clear: if well harnessed, agricultural biotechnology can solve the problems of famine and hunger in subSaharan Africa and South Asia.
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[2] I. Scoones. Agricultural Biotechnology and Food Security: Exploring the Debate , 2002 .
[3] Ian Scoones,et al. Participatory Environmental Policy Processes: Experiences from North and South , 2000 .