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Searching with a thematic focus on Agriculture and food, Biotechnology and GMOs, Trade Policy, Intellectual Property Rights
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Regulation of biotechnology in LDCs: implications for technology development and transfer
AgBioForum, 1999This paper explores the role of regulation in agricultural biotechnology innovation and diffusion in the developing world.DocumentIntellectual property rights and concentration in agricultural biotechnology
Cornell University Library, 2003This paper explores the relationship between intellectual property rights (IPRs) and structural change in the agricultural biotechnology industry.DocumentGM cotton set to invade West Africa: time to act!
GRAIN, 2004This study seeks to provide farmers with a critical and accessible analysis of Bt cotton, arguing that they are the ones that will be introducing any GM crops to the fields and should therefore be at the centre of decision making on the issue. It finds that Bt cotton will not significantly reduce pesticide use nor provide any economic advantages to farmers within West Africa.DocumentFood security and intellectual property rights in developing countries
International Environmental Law Research Centre, 2003This paper examines the implications of intellectual property rights (IPRs) on food security and the agricultural sector.DocumentGlobalisation and the international governance of modern biotechnology: development of IPR regime in India with reference to agricultural biotechnology
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003This paper looks at debates over the evolution of the IPRs regime in India as it relates to agricultural biotechnology.DocumentIntellectual property rights, biotechnology and food security
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003This paper examines the relationship between food security, agricultural biotechnology and intellectual property rights (IPRs), particularly for developing countries and poorer groups within those countries.Main findings include:for low income developing countries, the costs of strengthening IPRs may well outweigh the gainspro-IPR industry representatives and trade officials, with pDocumentThe biotech developmental state?: investigating the Chinese gene revolution
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003This paper looks at how and why China has pursued research on agricultural biotechnology within the public sector, in contrast with other parts of the world where the private sector has been dominant. In particular, the paper focuses on the role of science-policy networks in promoting a biotechnology discourse.DocumentPerformance of BT cotton in India: data from the first commercial crop
Gene Campaign, 2003This paper presents data on the field study of the first genetically modified crop to be cultivated in India.DocumentEngineering nutrition: GM crops for global justice?
Food Ethics Council, 2003This report challenges the dominant view of the scientific establishment that the future of agriculture lies with genetic modification technologies.DocumentBiotechnology and food security in Africa: some policy and institutional considerations
International Environmental Law Research Centre, 2002This paper asks how biotechnology can affect food security in Africa. It advices caution in either promoting or opposing biotechnology for its own sake.The paper argues that:no technology by and of itself has internal momentum to create food security for any society of region. It is how the technology is applied and moulded by society that determines its usefulness.Pages
