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    | | |  | World Agriculture and the Environment: A Commodity-By-Commodity Guide to Impacts and Practices |  | List Price: $35.00 Your Price: $35.00
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| Product Info | Reviews |  | 
 << 1 >>  Rating:
  Summary: Superb reference
 Review: This is a superb and unique reference.  It provides an incredible amount of detail on crops that enter world trade, and their impact on the environment.
 The very best thing about this book is that it is not strident and does not blatantly advocate a particular political agenda.  It is written in a scientific, objective tone that makes it far more convincing than the rhetorical works.  Only when he comes to tobacco (a crop that ruins the environment AND then ruins the consumers) does he use a few value-laden words!
 The reader is struck by what a mess the world is in, and how easily we could fix a lot of that.  The book provides enormous detail on soil erosion, chemical use, biodiversity reduction, and the rest of our woes, but it presents equal detail on how to prevent those problems.  Only a few crops (notably cotton, salmon, chocolate) would be hard to manage well.
 Two social themes stand out:  first, the very rapid concentration of commodity trade in the hands of a very few firms; second, the degree to which governments subsidize production-at-any-cost as opposed to production-with-environmental-protection.  (Subsidizing includes nonlegal subsidies, such as letting the rich get away with breaking environmental laws and dumping huge costs on poorer neighbors.)  One cannot escape the conclusion that changing this subsidy structure would fix most of the damage, worldwide.
 Environmentalists should think more about subsidies!
 Meanwhile, what can a concerned reader do?  The book tells how to seek out shade-grown coffee, responsibly raised beef and paper, and so on.  It is much harder, at least in the US, to find decently-produced soybeans or corn or wheat, but you can do it.  Cotton is a special problem, and the alternatives to it are mostly worse.  The hemp advocates will be vocal!
 We are in such a mess, and it would be so easy to do so much....  This is not a time to lose hope or give up.  By providing the big picture, this book should make every concerned citizen stop and think. The few errors I could spot in the book are trivial ones.
 This is an absolute must-read and must-have for anyone who works on problems of production and environment or on problems of world food supply and health.
 
 Rating:
  Summary: Superb reference
 Review: This is a superb and unique reference. It provides an incredible amount of detail on crops that enter world trade, and their impact on the environment.
 The very best thing about this book is that it is not strident and does not blatantly advocate a particular political agenda. It is written in a scientific, objective tone that makes it far more convincing than the rhetorical works. Only when he comes to tobacco (a crop that ruins the environment AND then ruins the consumers) does he use a few value-laden words!
 The reader is struck by what a mess the world is in, and how easily we could fix a lot of that. The book provides enormous detail on soil erosion, chemical use, biodiversity reduction, and the rest of our woes, but it presents equal detail on how to prevent those problems. Only a few crops (notably cotton, salmon, chocolate) would be hard to manage well.
 Two social themes stand out: first, the very rapid concentration of commodity trade in the hands of a very few firms; second, the degree to which governments subsidize production-at-any-cost as opposed to production-with-environmental-protection. (Subsidizing includes nonlegal subsidies, such as letting the rich get away with breaking environmental laws and dumping huge costs on poorer neighbors.) One cannot escape the conclusion that changing this subsidy structure would fix most of the damage, worldwide.
 Environmentalists should think more about subsidies!
 Meanwhile, what can a concerned reader do? The book tells how to seek out shade-grown coffee, responsibly raised beef and paper, and so on. It is much harder, at least in the US, to find decently-produced soybeans or corn or wheat, but you can do it. Cotton is a special problem, and the alternatives to it are mostly worse. The hemp advocates will be vocal!
 We are in such a mess, and it would be so easy to do so much.... This is not a time to lose hope or give up. By providing the big picture, this book should make every concerned citizen stop and think. The few errors I could spot in the book are trivial ones.
 This is an absolute must-read and must-have for anyone who works on problems of production and environment or on problems of world food supply and health.
 
 
 
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