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Should you buy organic food? Is it just a status symbol, or is it really better for us? Is it really better for the environment? What about organic produce grown thousands of miles from our kitchens, or on massive corporately owned farms? Is 鈥渓ocal鈥 or 鈥渟mall-scale鈥 better, even if it鈥檚 not organic? A lot of consumers who would like to do the right thing for their health and the environment are asking such questions.

Sapna Thottathil calls on us to rethink the politics of organic food by focusing on what it means for the people who grow and sell it鈥攚hat it means for their health, the health of their environment, and also their economic and political well-being. Taking readers to the state of Kerala in southern India, she shows us a place where the so-called 鈥淕reen Revolution鈥 program of hybrid seeds, synthetic fertilizers, and rising pesticide use had failed to reduce hunger while it caused a cascade of economic, medical, and environmental problems. Farmers burdened with huge debts from buying the new seeds and chemicals were committing suicide in troubling numbers. Farm laborers suffered from pesticide poisoning and rising rates of birth defects. A sharp fall in biodiversity worried environmental activists, and everyone was anxious about declining yields of key export crops like black pepper and coffee.

In their debates about how to solve these problems, farmers, environmentalists, and policymakers drew on Kerala鈥檚 history of and continuing commitment to grassroots democracy. In 2010, they took the unprecedented step of enacting a policy that requires all Kerala growers to farm organically by 2020. How this policy came to be and its immediate economic, political, and physical effects on the state鈥檚 residents offer lessons for everyone interested in agriculture, the environment, and what to eat for dinner. Kerala鈥檚 example shows that when done right, this kind of agriculture can be good for everyone in our global food system.

鈥淎 breath of fresh air in the organic/local food production discussion, this very engaging book provides a significant example of the structural conditions for the scaling up of organic agriculture.鈥濃擡ric Holt-Gim茅nez, executive director, Food First/Institute for Food and Development Policy 
鈥淭his book will make an important contribution to the field of organic literature as well as to the field of such food and agriculture transitions. I am not aware of many efforts to provide the reader with such a comprehensive treatment of such transitions in the context of a specific community.鈥濃擣rederick Kirschenmann, author, Cultivating an Ecological Conscience: Essays from a Farmer Philosopher

Paperback

ISBN-13
9781609382773
Retail price
$19.00
Sale end date

eBook, Perpetual

ISBN-13
9781609383015
Retail price
$19.00

Publication Details

Publication Details

Publication Date
04/25/2014
Pages, art, trim size
228 pages, 5 b&w photographs, 2 tables, 6 x 9 inches
Edition
1st