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Corporate Crops

Biotechnology, Agriculture, and the Struggle for Control

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Corporate Crops

By: Gabriela Pechlaner
Narrated by: Lisa Baney
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About this listen

Biotechnology crop production area increased from 1.7 million hectares to 148 million hectares worldwide between 1996 and 2010. While genetically modified food is a contentious issue, the debates are usually limited to health and environmental concerns, ignoring the broader questions of social control that arise when food production methods become corporate-owned intellectual property. Drawing on legal documents and dozens of interviews with farmers and other stakeholders, Corporate Crops covers four case studies based around litigation between biotechnology corporations and farmers. Pechlaner investigates the extent to which the proprietary aspects of biotechnologies-from patents on seeds to a plethora of new rules and contractual obligations associated with the technologies-are reorganizing crop production.

The lawsuits include patent infringement litigation launched by Monsanto against a Saskatchewan canola farmer who, in turn, claimed his crops had been involuntarily contaminated by the company's GM technology; a class action application by two Saskatchewan organic canola farmers launched against Monsanto and Aventis (later Bayer) for the loss of their organic market due to contamination with GMOs; and two cases in Mississippi in which Monsanto sued farmers for saving seeds containing its patented GM technology. Pechlaner argues that well-funded corporate lawyers have a decided advantage over independent farmers in the courts and in creating new forms of power and control in agricultural production. Corporate Crops demonstrates the effects of this intersection between the courts and the fields where profits, not just a food supply, are reaped.

©2012 University of Texas Press (P)2015 Redwood Audiobooks
Agricultural & Food Sciences Business & Careers Economics Environment Corporate

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Difficult to follow

Full of unnecessary verbiage and very difficult to follow. It's disappointing because it's a topic I (obviously) want to learn more about, but taking it in requires intense focus. It's not the sort of thing I can casually listen to during my daily commute, without it turning into background noise with little I can take away from it.

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