Hungry Corporations: Transnational Biotech Companies Colonise the Food Chain

Author:   Helena Paul ,  Ricarda Steinbrecher ,  Devlin Kuyek ,  Devlin Kuyek
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781842773017


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   01 December 2003
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Hungry Corporations: Transnational Biotech Companies Colonise the Food Chain


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Overview

This book is about an issue of our times which does not yet get the attention that it deserves - the growing dominance of huge transnational corporations over every aspect of our lives from executive super-pay to private sector pension funds. The authors of this book look at one particular kind of modern corporation - the hi-tech agro-chemical and genetic engineering companies that now dominate the food chain. In this richly detailed account, they show how a handful of companies have: - Accelerated the industrialization of agriculture and the integration of the global economy in order to gain an alarming control over the food chain. - Penetrated the previously independent world of scholarly research both in universities and the specialized international agricultural research centres in CGIAR. - Manipulated public opinion, including distorting our understanding of key environmental processes and issues. - Unduly influenced regulatory agencies and national governments. - Turned international bodies like the WTO, the World Bank, and the FAO into instruments devising rules and policies primarily of benefit to corporate growth and corporate profit. - And now are further expanding by bullying the governments and farmers of the developing countries to accept their technologies and products. Whether you are interested in the environment, democracy, or the development of countries in the South, the information and analysis contained in this book will prove both disturbing and empowering.

Full Product Details

Author:   Helena Paul ,  Ricarda Steinbrecher ,  Devlin Kuyek ,  Devlin Kuyek
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Zed Books Ltd
Dimensions:   Width: 13.50cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.50cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9781842773017


ISBN 10:   1842773011
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   01 December 2003
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. In The Name Of Hunger - Paving The Road To Biotech Agriculture 2. Corporations: From Royal Charters To Biotech Gold Rush 3. Image Control: Manipulation and Public Relations 4. Consolidation, Contamination And Loss Of Diversity 5. The Main International Players And Corporate Influence 6. Corporate Influence on International 7. Government Legislation and Corporate Influence 8. Opening Up The South 9. Conclusion: Summing up, Moving on

Reviews

It takes something like a global positioning satellite to get a grip on the players in the current global food system, and that is just what this book provides?. [It is] an essential reminder that the corporation is a product of human construction, not divine revelation, and that what we have done we can undo. * Brewster Kneen, author, Farmageddon: Food and the Culture of Biotechnology * Tells us how the transnational biotech companies are manipulating their reach and control in what appears to be a desperate effort to recolonise the majority world. * Devinder Sharma, food and trade policy analyst * In less than a decade a handful of extremely powerful corporations have managed to gain control of the very building blocks of life. But with the scientific basis of their technology flawed, and hardly any practical results to show so far, these gene-giants now urgently need an ideological basis to justify their investment in genetic engineering. They have found it in the 800 or so million people that go hungry every day. Hungry Corporations explains how they go about it: pushing legislators to give them monopoly control, co-opting public research institutions, organizing PR campaigns, and discrediting everybody who disagrees. * Henk Hobbelink, author and Coordinator GRAIN * Using keen historical analysis, gripping facts and solid documentation, Hungry Corporations reveals how a handful of transnational enterprises are using genetic engineering as tools for ownership and control of the global food system. Hungry Corporations [will remain] a classic for years to come. * Hope Shand, author, Human Nature: Agricultural Biodiversity and Farm-Based Food Security * Hungry Corporations tells us how the biotech industry and their captive governments use Third World hunger as the justification for force feeding the world with GMO's, while it is really their own hunger for profits and power which is driving the commercialization of GM crops and foods. Written by authors who have been in the frontline of fighting the biotech giants, Hungry Corporations is a valuable resource for researchers, activists and ordinary citizens determined to defend their freedom. * Vandana Shiva, author, Staying Alive *


'Hungry Corporations tells us how the biotech industry and their captive governments use Third World hunger as the justification for force feeding the world with GMO's, while it is really their own hunger for profits and power which is driving the commercialization of GM crops and foods. Written by authors who have been in the frontline of fighting the biotech giants, Hungry Corporations is a valuable resource for researchers, activists and ordinary citizens determined to defend their freedom.' - Vandana Shiva, author, Staying Alive 'In less than a decade a handful of extremely powerful corporations have managed to gain control of the very building blocks of life. But with the scientific basis of their technology flawed, and hardly any practical results to show so far, these gene-giants now urgently need an ideological basis to justify their investment in genetic engineering. They have found it in the 800 or so million people that go hungry every day. Hungry Corporations explains how they go about it: pushing legislators to give them monopoly control, co-opting public research institutions, organizing PR campaigns, and discrediting everybody who disagrees.' - Henk Hobbelink, author and Coordinator GRAIN 'Using keen historical analysis, gripping facts and solid documentation, Hungry Corporations reveals how a handful of transnational enterprises are using genetic engineering as tools for ownership and control of the global food system. Hungry Corporations [will remain] a classic for years to come.' - Hope Shand, author, Human Nature: Agricultural Biodiversity and Farm-Based Food Security 'Tells us how the transnational biotech companies are manipulating their reach and control in what appears to be a desperate effort to recolonise the majority world.' - Devinder Sharma, food and trade policy analyst 'It takes something like a global positioning satellite to get a grip on the players in the current global food system, and that is just what this book provides?. [It is] an essential reminder that the corporation is a product of human construction, not divine revelation, and that what we have done we can undo.' - Brewster Kneen, author, Farmageddon: Food and the Culture of Biotechnology


Author Information

Helena Paul recently completed 12 years working with the Gaia Foundation (London, UK), where she focused on indigenous rights, the protection of rainforests and campaigns against oil extraction in the tropics, patents on life and and genetic engineering. She was the European representative on the International Committee of Oilwatch International and actively participated in the No Patents on Life Coalition that campaigned against the EU Biotech patents directive. She is now an independent consultant and member of Econexus, an international non-profit research organization. She has travelled extensively to Southern countries in connection with her work. In Ecuador she has collaborated with Accion Ecologica, the Fatima Centre and the Rainforest Information Centre over several years. In Brazil, she has spoken of the risks of genetically engineered crops at events organized by the Workers Party of Brazil and local resistance groups in Rio Grande do Sul, Parana and Santa Catalina. Dr. Ricarda A. Steinbrecher received a first class honours M.Sc. in biology at the University of Kiel, Germany and a Ph.D. in molecular genetics at the University of London. She is a member of the British Society for Allergy, Nutritional and Environmental Medicine and advisor to many national and international NGOs, including the Pesticide Action Network, Third World Network, WWF, Women's Environmental Network and the Five Year Freeze Campaign. Currently, she is Director of Econexus, and engages in collaborative work with researchers at universities in the UK, USA and Norway on issues of genetic engineering, toxicity and gene ecology. Over the last six years she has taken part in numerous British Government consultations regarding the release of genetically modified organisms (GMOs). She has also acted as an advisor at the negotiations for the Cartagena Biosafety Protocol under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. Lucy Michaels MA (Econ) has been campaigning both locally and nationally to raise awareness about genetic engineering and industrial agriculture. This has included working with the Women's Environmental Network in London and as a guest researcher for Econexus. She is currently the food and agriculture researcher at CorporateWatch UK. Devlin Kuyek is an activist researcher who spent nearly three years with Pesticide Action Network - Asia/Pacific, leading its Pesticide Industry Programme and organizing the launch of the International Alliance Against Agrochemical TNCs. Since leaving PAN-AP, he has conducted research for international networks of peasant movements, farmers organizations, and NGOs in Asia and Africa into the impacts of emerging trends in agricultural research and development on small farmers.

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