TY - JOUR
T1 - At issue
T2 - More ominous than climate change? Global policy threats to african food production
AU - Mushita, Andrew
AU - Thompson, Carol
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - In international fora, climate change discussions center on how farmers can "mitigate" and "adapt" to weather variability to increase food production. Instead, African smallholder food producers are employing ways to "resist" and "sustain," for international policies in the name of climate change threaten their farming systems, biodiverse genetic wealth, and their indigenous knowledge. These policy storms could be more devastating than any weather variability, for they could destroy the very resources that farmers use to produce biodiverse foods: their seeds, land, soil, water, and markets. This article first focuses on analysis of the policy changes that mirror the climate hazards: drought, floods, rising temperatures, and weather variability. Second, we discuss African alternatives, the ways in which smallholder farmers are resisting outside agendas to transform their farming systems and sustaining their resilient food production.
AB - In international fora, climate change discussions center on how farmers can "mitigate" and "adapt" to weather variability to increase food production. Instead, African smallholder food producers are employing ways to "resist" and "sustain," for international policies in the name of climate change threaten their farming systems, biodiverse genetic wealth, and their indigenous knowledge. These policy storms could be more devastating than any weather variability, for they could destroy the very resources that farmers use to produce biodiverse foods: their seeds, land, soil, water, and markets. This article first focuses on analysis of the policy changes that mirror the climate hazards: drought, floods, rising temperatures, and weather variability. Second, we discuss African alternatives, the ways in which smallholder farmers are resisting outside agendas to transform their farming systems and sustaining their resilient food production.
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84885358747
SN - 1093-2658
VL - 13
SP - 1
EP - 25
JO - African Studies Quarterly
JF - African Studies Quarterly
IS - 4
ER -