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Searching with a thematic focus on Agriculture and food, Agricultural policy

Showing 601-610 of 747 results

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  • Document

    WFP policy on donations of foods derived from biotechnology (GM/biotech foods)

    United Nations [UN] World Food Programme, 2002
    This paper, presented to the WFP Executive Board for consideration, outlines the WFP policy on donations of foods derived from biotechnology, summarises lessons learned from the Southern Africa emergency and outlines follow-up measures.The WFP policy that has been in effect with regard to all donations of foods is summarised as follows:WFP distributes only foods that meet the food safet
  • Document

    Science, policy and regulation: challenges for agricultural biotechnology in developing countries

    Millennium Development Goals, 2001
    This paper addresses the question of the relationship between science, policy and regulation in the context of debates about the future of agricultural biotechnology. First the paper outlines some of the challenges for biotechnology policy and regulation before exploring the different contexts for biotechnology science and the framing of the policy debate.
  • Document

    Biotechnology and the politics of regulation

    Environment Team, IDS Sussex, 2001
    This paper aims to refine thinking about the politics of regulating crop biotechnologies. Firstly it explores the purposes regulation serves in commercial, as well as broader social and political terms, arguing that risk management, facilitating trade and generating public trust are three of its key functions.
  • Document

    Biotechnology and the policy process: Zimbabwe

    Environment Team, IDS Sussex, 2002
    This paper focuses on three areas of the biotechnology policy process. Firstly, it looks at the national policy framework, identifying key development and economic policies and in particular considering the implications of policy on food security and development.
  • Document

    Agricultural biotechnology and food security: Exploring the debate

    Environment Team, IDS Sussex, 2002
    This paper aims to explore the various dimensions of the debate over the extent to which agricultural biotechnology offers a solution to issues of food security. It begins by looking at the assumptions of the arguments made by various protagonists and situating historically the contemporary discussion of agricultural biotechnology in broader debates about food security.
  • Document

    Modern biotechnology and developing-world agriculture

    Environment Team, IDS Sussex, 2002
    This essay provides and introduction to agricultural biotechnology in a developing country context. The author looks at issues of food security, consumer acceptance, sectoral change and regulation in the context of advances in genomics and bioinformatics which have led to an increase in the rate and volume of advances in the biotech.
  • Document

    USAID and GM food aid

    Greenpeace International, 2002
    This paper is essentially a rebuttal of claims by the head of USAID that environmental groups were "endangering the lives of millions of people in southern Africa by encouraging local governments to reject genetically modified (GM) food aid".
  • Document

    To die or not to die: this is the problem

    AgBioWorld Foundation, 2002
    This paper from the AgBioWorld Foundation is a direct response to an earlier paper from the Zambian Kasisi Agricultural Training Centre (KATC) and the Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection (JCTR) which challenged the suitability of existing GM technology for Zambian agriculture and supported their Governments position with regard to GM food aid.The authors directly attack the findings of the
  • Document

    What is the impact of GMOs on sustainable agriculture in Zambia?

    Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection, Zambia, 2002
    This study argues strongly that the introduction of GM crops to Zambia will have considerable negative effects and negligable benefits for the development of small scale agricutlure on which the country's food security depends.Further the author claims that a concerted campaign of 'propoganda and distortion' has been undertaken by the biotechnology industry to persuade national leaders that GM
  • Document

    Managing the competitive transition of the coffee sector in Central America

    2002
    This paper provides background information for a conference on ways to address the coffee crisis in Central America. The document is divided into six sectionsthe nature of the crisis and its magnitude ways to improve the quality of Central American coffee, as a strategic competitive response to the crisismarket opportunities and marketing management issues to be considered by co

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