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“Feeding the Famine?
American Food Aid and the GMO Debate in
Southern Africa.” Food Policy.
29 (6) (December, 2004): 593-608.
Abstract
The inclusion of
genetically modified maize in food aid
shipments to Southern Africa during the
2002 food crisis rekindled debates over
agricultural biotechnology. As the
region edged ever closer to
famine--putting the lives of some 14
million Africans at risk--corporate
pundits, government officials and
biotech's critics debated the health and
environmental dangers posed by the new
technology.
By situating the
decision to send genetically modified
maize to Southern Africa in the context
of US-European debates over agricultural
biotechnology, it becomes clear that the
promotion of biotechnology has nothing
to do with ending hunger in the region.
Indeed, American food aid shipments to
Southern Africa have little to do with
the famine at all. Instead, I argue that
US food aid policy following the 2002
crisis was intended to promote the
adoption of biotech crops in Southern
Africa, expanding the market access and
control of transnational corporations
and undermining local smallholder
production thereby fostering greater
food insecurity on the Continent.
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