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  1. Are we losing diversity? Navigating ecological, political, and epistemic dimensions of agrobiodiversity conservation.Maywa Montenegro de Wit - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (3):625-640.
    Narratives of seed ‘loss’ and ‘persistence’ remain at loggerheads. Crop genetic diversity is rapidly eroding worldwide, we are told, and numerous studies support this claim. Other data, however, suggests an alternative storyline: far from disappearing, seed diversity persists around the world, resisting the homogenizing forces of modern capitalism. Which of these accounts is closer to the truth? As it turns out, crop biodiversity is more easily invoked than measured, more easily wielded than understood. In this essay, I contend that the (...)
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  • Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed.James C. Scott - 1999 - Utopian Studies 10 (2):310-312.
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  • Civic seeds: new institutions for seed systems and communities—a 2016 survey of California seed libraries.Daniela Soleri - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (2):331-347.
    Seed libraries are institutions that support the creation of semi-formal seed systems, but are often intended to address larger issues that are part of the “food movement” in the global north. Over 100 SLs are reported present in California. I describe a functional framework for studying and comparing seed systems, and use that to investigate the social and biological characteristics of California SLs in 2016 and how they are contributing to alternative seed systems based on interviews with 45 SL managers. (...)
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  • ‘Pesticides are our children now’: cultural change and the technological treadmill in the Burkina Faso cotton sector.Jessie K. Luna - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (2):449-462.
    Amidst broad debates about the “New Green Revolution” in Africa, input-intensive agriculture is on the rise in some parts of Africa. This paper examines the underlying drivers of the recent and rapid adoption of herbicides and genetically modified seeds in the Burkina Faso cotton sector. Drawing on 8 months of ethnographic fieldwork in the Houndé region, this article contends that economic and cultural dynamics—often considered separately in analyses of technology adoption—have co-produced a self-reinforcing technological treadmill. On the one hand, male (...)
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  • Lords of the Harvest: Biotech, Big Money, and the Future of Food.Daniel Charles - 2003 - Journal of the History of Biology 36 (2):411-413.
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  • The problem with the farmer’s voice.Glenn Davis Stone & Andrew Flachs - 2014 - Agriculture and Human Values 31 (4):649-653.
    In this essay we present three biases that make it difficult to represent farmer voices in a meaningful way. These biases are information bias, individual bias, and short-term bias. We illustrate these biases through two case studies. One is the case of Golden Rice in the Philippines and the other is the case of Bt cotton in India.
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