This book sets out some answers to the question: how can we build an ecologically sustainable and humane system of food production and distribution? The modern food economy is a paradox. Surplus 'food mountains' si...

Buy Now From Amazon

This book sets out some answers to the question: how can we build an ecologically sustainable and humane system of food production and distribution? The modern food economy is a paradox. Surplus 'food mountains' sit alongside global malnutrition and the developed world subsidizes its own agriculture while pressurizing the developing world to liberalize at all costs. Export competition is increasingly aggressive whilst the reliance on imports in many countries has worrying implications for food security. Family farms go out of business and dispossessed peasant farmers are driven into urban slums. The WTO's uneven application of neoliberal economics to food production is relatively new, and the consequences of mounting deficits, rising 'food miles', and social upheaval, are untested but ominous.


Similar Products

Concentration and Power in the Food System: Who Controls What We Eat? (Contemporary Food Studies: Economy, Culture and Politics)Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System - Revised and UpdatedSweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern HistoryMore Than Just Food: Food Justice and Community Change (California Studies in Food and Culture)A History of World Agriculture: From the Neolithic Age to the Current CrisisThe Politics of Food Supply: U.S. Agricultural Policy in the World Economy (Yale Agrarian Studies Series)Who Speaks For Islam?: What a Billion Muslims Really ThinkThe Chicken Trail: Following Workers, Migrants, and Corporations across the Americas