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Harvest & Food Supply


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Debate sobre la seguridad alimenticia en África

August 19, 2011 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

En servicio al proyecto del Foro sobre Política y Crisis, la Red Hot Spring de innovación y debate plantea una conversación global sobre la seguridad alimenticia y la escasez crónica de agua y comida en África. Las lecciones de este experimento en investigación y brainstorming colaborativos se podrá aplicar a otras situaciones de crisis y escasez alrededor del planeta.

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El alba de la época Antropocena

August 19, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

En una reunión de científicos europeos, en Estocolmo, el hombre que inventó el término ‘antropoceno’ para describir una nueva época geológica—en la que la influencia humana domina los proceso naturales—ha anunciado que el término ahora se está aplicando desde múltiples campos de estudio. La importancia real del término es que la información ecológica es cada vez más imprescindible para poder llevar a cabo las ambiciones humanas de una forma responsable y sostenible.

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A Realistic Vision for World Peace (TED video)

February 13, 2011 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Jody Williams believes that peace is defined by human (not national) security and that it must be achieved through sustainable development, environmental justice, and meeting people’s basic needs. To this end, she co-founded the Nobel Women’s Initiative, endorsed by six of seven living female Peace laureates. She chairs the effort to support activists, researchers, and others working toward peace, justice, and equality for women and thus humanity. Williams also continues to fight for the total global eradication of landmines.

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Obama Remarks to Joint Session of the Indian Parliament in New Delhi (transcript)

November 9, 2010 :: staff :: Comments Off

Over the past three days, my wife Michelle and I have experienced the — and dynamism of India and its people — from the majesty of Humayun’s Tomb to the advanced technologies that are empowering farmers and women who are the backbone of Indian society; from the Diwali celebrations with schoolchildren to the innovators who are fueling India’s economic rise; from the university students who will chart India’s future, to you —-leaders who helped to bring India to this moment of extraordinary promise.

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U.S. Food Crisis: Until We End Poverty, We Are Not Free

November 2, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The United States of America is the “wealthiest country in the history of the world”. We hear this repeated so often, it’s almost as if it has become the national slogan. Economists tend to agree that it’s the truth, but that wealth is relative: tens of millions of Americans live in abject poverty, unable to obtain basic sustenance, medical care, adequate education or even basic public safety. One in five children in the United States now live in poverty. Among African American and Hispanic children, the rate is 30 percent.

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The Buckminster Fuller Challenge: Design to Serve Humanity

July 17, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Buckminster Fuller was one of the 20th century’s most visionary architects, whose philosophy of socially responsible planning and design has influenced cutting-edge technology research and public policy the world over, through the UN’s development programs and pioneering entrepreneurship aimed at lifting billions out of poverty. His vision was, in his own words, “To make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone.”

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Sustainable Security: Protecting Against Chaos (discussion)

July 5, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Sustainable security is a paradigm shift in foreign policy, economic and defense planning: it entails considering that not only diplomatic relations and military preparedness or alliances, but the full spectrum of connections between our society and the world abroad, determine the degree to which our future security and prosperity can be reasonably guaranteed.

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Earth Day: as Climate Patterns Shift, Consciousness Spreads

April 22, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Earth Day 2010 finds our world, in many ways, at a moment of crucial historical importance, on the issue of climate destabilization and environmental stewardship. The combined effects of major scientific advances, which have brought a wealth of hard evidence, the global campaign to raise awareness, and the deteriorating conditions of the carbon fuel sector’s relationship with consumers’ interest, now mean awareness of the urgent need to achieve a more sustainable global economic infrastructure has spread rapidly.

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‘Economica’ Exhibit Explores Women’s Role in the Global Economy

March 1, 2010 :: staff :: Comments Off

The International Museum of Women, an online art gallery, which aims to foster dialogue and promote new educational directions for women and in relation to issues of women’s rights and opportunity, is hosting an exhibit called ‘Ecomomica’, which explores the role women play in the evolving global economy.

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2nd Decade of the 21st Century: Particle Physics, Media Freedom & Global Economics

January 3, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Continuing our series on the evolutions that can be expected over the coming decade, we look at new directions in particle physics, media technologies that are enabling not only greater freedom, but a new communicative paradigm which will, in part, help steer us to the great discoveries of this moment in history, and a vital new understanding of global economic patterns, which will revolutionize the way governments around the world plan for domestic spending and trade policy.

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2nd Decade of the 21st Century: Gender Equality, Food Security & Counter-extremism

January 2, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Because three issues alone will not adequately describe the breakthroughs we will experience in the coming decade, a second installment of the 2nd decade prognosis is necessary. While denuclearization pacts and a verification process for limiting the threat of nuclear weapons is likely to be key to international relations, and the green technology revolution will spur economic development around the world, international cooperation must also be directed toward issues relating to basic resources, like water and the food supply. Gender equality will be key to peacemaking efforts, and counter-extremism will be a leading aspect of collaborative development efforts.

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Glaciers Are not just a ‘Canary in the Coal Mine’

December 23, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

As ongoing global climate destabilization builds momentum, and fundamental climate-linked environmental processes come apart, we are hearing time and again that melting ice, whether in glaciers or in the Arctic Ocean, is “the canary in the coal mine”. The metaphor is very tempting, indeed, as coal is the most carbon-intensive fuel in use and a major contributing factor to global warming and climate destabilization, but the problem with the metaphor lies in the meaning of the canary being nothing more than an alarm signal. Glaciers are very much more important to human civilization than that.

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Switchgrass to Be Twice as Efficient Ethanol Crop as Corn

December 17, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Devoting valuable grain crops to fuel production has had an immediate negative impact on the global food supply, reducing supply and pushing prices higher, even as one billion people suffer from chronic hunger. In the United States, high prices and economic crisis mean on in eight are now insufficiently able to access adequate food supplies. But a new generation of crop-based biofuels will be more efficient and need not interfere with the food supply.

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China, World Bank Plan Industrial Development Zones for Africa

December 14, 2009 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: Comments Off

The World Bank is working with the Chinese government to fund major industrial development in specific areas across Africa, as part of an effort to spur development and create jobs. The effort is needed in order to breathe new life into African cities that are experiencing population explosions, with little new investment to match the demand for resources and jobs. But three key factors raise questions about whether the China plan for African industry will be good for Africa.

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Farm Sustainability Corps Can Make Farming More Lucrative, Secure Food Supply

December 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Soil erosion is just one of the many factors of sustained entropy undermining the global agricultural capacity, and by extension the global food supply. Desertification affecting sub-Saharan Africa, including the expansion of the indomitable Sahara, and across northwestern China, poses a very real threat to cropland feeding hundreds of millions of people. A farm sustainability corps could help deliver resources, know-how and restorative and sustainable soil conservation practices to the most affected areas.

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World Food Supply Under Threat from Environmental Factors

December 10, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The global food supply is facing major security challenges, as warming global average temperatures and the destabilization of climate patterns and natural services undermine dependable agricultural cycles and threaten resources. The food supply is the most direct and visible connection between the breakdown of global climate systems and human health and wellbeing, but not the only link. The possible collapse of a major part of the human food supply means the collapse of agriculture, i.e. the breakdown of the human habitat.

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Ethiopia Needs Food Aid for 6.2 Million

October 26, 2009 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: Comments Off

The government of Ethiopia has issued an emergency appeal for food aid to prevent 6.2 million people from falling into chronic hunger. The collapse of harvests and prolonged severe drought conditions has made it near impossible for Ethiopia to provide food for its surging population. The new aid plea has international aid organizations and financial institutions scrambling to work out the real human need and arrange assistance.

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Major Climate-linked Emissions Regulation Will Help Everyone Everywhere, including Business

October 23, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Even as momentum gathers for major collaborative climate-linked emissions regulatory policy, aimed at reducing greenhouse-gas emissions like carbon dioxide (CO2), some in industry remain convinced of an outdated theory that assumes emissions reduction must be bad for business. The US Chamber of Commerce (CC), a leading business lobby, is devoting $150 million to fight regulation [...]

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Water Resource Depletion Threatens Global Food Supply

October 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Water resource depletion leads not only to chronic scarcity of clean, safe drinking water for increasing numbers of people, but means arable land is harder to cultivate and to maintain. Persistent drought and accelerated desertification (the expansion of deserts into the farmed and/or built environment) are results of water resource depletion.

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Ecology is About Awareness, not a System of Control

September 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The field of ecological research and reporting is a part of the basic human urge to engage the world through reason and a quest for understanding. It is not about seizing control of society’s urges and services and limiting the freedom of anyone, but rather about making sure we have the information we need to make the best choices, then advocating for those choices, when inertia and custom stand in the way of better health — for individuals and in the manner in which human individuals respond to their social and natural environments.

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UN Gen. Assembly Seeks Global Consensus on Economy, Environment, Rights

September 22, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The UN General Assembly, which brings together every head of government in the world, to offer their country’s position on issues, their country’s demands regarding trade and conflict negotiations, their country’s hopes for a more harmonious world, this year truly grapples with issues of global consensus. Economic recovery, for many parts of the world, will require an unprecedented expansion of women’s rights and sustained attention to responsible environmental stewardship.

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Does Anyone Know What Capitalism Is?

September 15, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Capitalism is “survival of the fittest”… capitalism is rooted in the idea of merit; everyone should be compensated according to his or her contribution (to the common good?)… capitalism is about the movement of capital; the more it moves, the richer everyone gets… capitalism is an upgraded feudalism, where the capitalist is an overseer of an abstract terrain made up of investments, not of arable lands… capitalism is democracy; the free spirit of an open society requires capitalism to support the liberties of individual citizens, and protect against government overreach… capitalism is virtue… or, capitalism is the absence of virtue…

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Generative Economics: How to Expand the Resource Base as We Access It?

September 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

As the “perfect storm” gathers from inchoate, deceptively non-threatening winds, we can look ahead, backward and into the mirror and ask how crisis comes, or why, if it is inevitable, if we might just fall right out of it, as we fell into it. But the answer is simple: human crisis comes from excess, from inordinate ambition, from misplaced aggression, from over-exploitation of resources, each of which generates real and problematic tension across the landscape of human experience.

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Global Food Supply Jeopardized by Converging Crisis-level Interferences

September 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The security of the global food supply is deteriorating rapidly, due to a convergence of forces all related to long-gathering crisis-level erosions of the human agricultural prospect. Desertification, water scarcity, massive toxic runoff and oceanic wildlife collapse, are all putting the global food web under unprecedented stress.

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Kenya Facing Major Drought, 4 Million Require Food Aid

September 1, 2009 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: One Comment

Tens of thousands of head of livestock are dying in Kenya, due to one of the worst recorded droughts in the east African nation’s history. The UN is requesting $230 million in aid, and says 4 million people may face hunger if food aid is not delivered. Goatherds report being unable to get their herds to water, having to leave their animals along the way and carry what small amount of water they can back to the dying animals.

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53 Million in ‘Emerging Markets’ Plunged into Poverty by Great Recession

August 15, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

A World Bank study has projected that the global financial crisis and resulting recession will plunge some 53 million people across “emerging markets” —like China and India— into absolute poverty, in 2009 alone. In China, tens of millions of people have lost jobs related to the export-dependent manufacturing sector.

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U.S. Government Seeks to Limit Use of Antibiotics for Livestock

July 22, 2009 :: staff :: 2 Comments

Preventive use of antibiotics has one salient effect: it speeds the evolution of targeted bacteria, allowing them to develop pervasive resistance to known treatments. In short, preventive administration of antibiotics makes diseases far more dangerous. The US government is now seeking to end the practice of administering antibiotics to livestock, which health officials believe is putting human health at risk.

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Carbon Offsetting May Be Means of Fighting Global Poverty

July 19, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Carbon offsets allow the use of carbon-emitting processes to help fund and develop clean alternatives, which can then compete with and possibly replace the offending carbon-emitters. But there are also ways in which carbon offsetting can be used to combat poverty around the world. If offsets are focused on reducing bad habits, resulting from those engaging in those habits having either no alternative or no training to find alternatives, people living in the poorest conditions can find themselves benefitting from the clean energy revolution.

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Desert Rhubarb is First Known Self-Irrigating Plant

July 15, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

A variety of desert rhubarb, indigenous to the deserts of Israel and Jordan, is the world’s first identified “self-irrigating” plant. The broad green leaves of the plant are unique in the harsh arid climate, and have been found to benefit from a system of water distribution which speeds rainwater down into the soil, toward the roots of the plant, by way of channels along the exterior of the leaves’ veins, lubricated by a substance that keeps the rainwater moving.

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Obama Interview with AllAfrica, in Anticipation of Ghana Visit (video + transcript)

July 8, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

Ghana has now undergone a couple of successful elections in which power was transferred peacefully, even a very close election. I think that the new President, President Mills, has shown himself committed to the rule of law, to the kinds of democratic commitments that ensure stability in a country. And I think that there is a direct correlation between governance and prosperity. Countries that are governed well, that are stable, where the leadership recognizes that they are accountable to the people and that institutions are stronger than any one person have a track record of producing results for the people. And we want to highlight that.

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G8 Summit Hits Snag in Establishing Global Emissions Reductions

July 8, 2009 :: Denver Lessing :: One Comment

Developing nations have failed to deliver the collaborative consensus sought by US president Obama and other G8 leaders in anticipation of the Copenhagen Climate Conference scheduled for later this year. While G8 leaders agreed global climate policy should be oriented toward avoiding any increase in global average temperatures of more than 3º Fahrenheit, they did not reach agreement on how to cap or reduce emissions to set levels by 2050.

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Diversify Wheat Crops to Prevent Fungus-induced Global Harvest Collapse (discussion)

July 8, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

The Hot Spring Network has opened a discussion, in collaboration with Café Sentido, on the need to diversify the global wheat crop in order to prevent an evolved crop fungus, Ug99, from destroying as much as 80% of the global wheat harvest.

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Ug99 Stem Rust Fungus Could Wipe Out 80% of World Wheat Crop

June 23, 2009 :: staff :: 2 Comments

A crop-borne fungus that targets wheat, named Ug99 because it was first identified in Uganda in 1999, has become one of the primary threats to global food security. Newfound virulence in the evolving stem-rust strain suggests the fungus could destroy as much as 80% of the world’s most widely grown crop: wheat.

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Obama’s 1st 100 Days: Diplomatic, Economic, Energy & Transparency Reform

April 29, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

Barack Obama’s first 100 days in office have been a flurry of major reforms and of global political and economic strategy. He took the oath of office on 20 January 2009 with the worst recession in 70 years setting in, major banks on the verge of insolvency, record numbers of home foreclosures, two wars in Asia, an increasingly hostile Russia and a predecessor’s policy of using torture to “enhance” interrogations. Not only has he moved forward on the economy, healthcare, security, and energy; he has reformed the entire American diplomatic paradigm, moving toward a “smart power” based on 3d vision: diplomacy, development, defense.

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Historic Investment in Global Food Security Major Achievement of Obama Europe Trip

April 7, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Largely ignored by the mainstream media, one major part of the president’s European tour was his insistence that the international community needs to make historic long-term commitments to food security. If made, that commitment would be perhaps the most significant security achievement of the G20 summit and Obama’s first European trip, as food insecurity poses [...]

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Nueva Constitución Boliviana Aumenta Derechos Indígenas

February 9, 2009 :: Severino Villalonso :: Comments Off

Cuando accedió al poder, el presidente boliviano, Evo Morales, consiguió una meta antes inalcanzable, convirtiéndose en el primer indígena elegido presidente de un país en las Américas. Morales prometió cambios radicales a las leyes bolivianas, para refortalecer su planeada revolución socialista-laborista y para dar mas derechos a las poblaciones indígenas, sobretodo los Aymara, etnicidad que incluye al presidente entre los suyos.

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Ban, Zapatero call for action to combat soaring food prices; ICC opens first ever trial; Obama seeks to raise fuel-efficiency in US…

January 26, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

Food supply: UN sec. gen. Ban Ki-moon and Spanish pres. José Luís Rodríguez Zapatero meet in Madrid for UN conference on exploding food prices, potential related security risks, potential solutions. Last year, as the banking system suffered widespread instability, across the world, soaring transport and food costs put tens of millions of people around the [...]

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Toward a ‘Transactional’ Cosmology: Web Dynamics for the Information Age

January 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Each information transaction, sometimes as exemplary, sometimes as single element added to a sweeping aggregate of historical sway, is a precedent, which can motivate, influence or redirect the push of future happenstance. And, we must take note, every transaction involving matter or energy contains information, traces of a history of its coming into being, and generates a “footprint”, a trace of its appearance and its transition into something beyond the transactional moment.

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Doctors Without Borders Lists Top Ten Humanitarian Crises at End of 2008

December 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The global aid group, Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF / Doctors Without Borders) has released its 11th annual report on the ten most severe humanitarian crises around the world. This years list cites mass poverty, resource scarcity and ungovernability in Somalia, Ethiopia and DR Congo, severe health risks to the populations of Zimbabwe, Burma (Myanmar) and DR Congo, and the constant danger of violence against civilians in Iraq, DR Congo, and Sudan’s Darfur region, along the Chad border.

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India Impacted by Rise in Food Insecurity Worldwide, Deteriorating Economic Conditions

December 21, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There are over 230 million people suffering from hunger or undernourishment in India. No other nation has so many people suffering chronic malnutrition, and the undernourished in India represent 27% of the worldwide hunger-stricken population. While India’s economy develops and the potential for an expanded middle class takes root, the total number of Indians going [...]

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12 Million Children in the United States Face Hunger

December 19, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

An estimated 12 million children across the United States are currently facing hunger on a daily basis. With nearly 40 million people living below the government’s officially recognized “poverty line”, chronic undernourishment affects as many as 1 in 6 American children. In 2007 98% of US families with “very low food security” reported being afraid they would not have enough to make it to their next opportunity to acquire food, while 97%, reported that the food they bought was simply not enough to avoid going hungry, and that there was no money left to buy more.

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Flawed International Farm Seed Rules Establish Permanent Spread of Patented GM Brands

December 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

A long-running bellwether legal case in Canada’s farming industry, which has left at least one farmer unable to farm any crop variety of rapeseed (canola) —for fear of having to pay accidental royalties to bio-chemical giant Monsanto—, highlights the need for comprehensive reform of international seed regulation standards. The Canadian courts ruled that the individual farmer had to shoulder the burden of ferreting out any instance of “contamination” of his crop by pollen from nearby genetically-modified (GM) planting, as Monsanto held a patent on the seeds. The farmer, and those who support his claims, argue that there is no means by which anyone can prevent cross-pollination from GM plants.

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Cholera Epidemic Spreads in Zimbabwe, as Health Services Collapse (video)

December 9, 2008 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: Comments Off

The spread of cholera due to Zimbabwe’s foundering hygienic infrastructure is reaching crisis proportions. UNICEF is calling for an emergency fund of $17.5 million to fight the spread of cholera in Zimbabwe, calling the outbreak “a cholera crisis of unprecedented levels”. With 13,960 cases already declared and an estimated 589 dead to date, the UN warns upwards of 60,000 people could become infected if drastic and immediate action is not taken to contain the epidemic.

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5 Million May Be at Risk of Starvation in Zimbabwe, Says WFP

November 14, 2008 :: Denver Lessing :: Comments Off

The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) has warned that shortfalls in food aid to Zimbabwe could leave as many as 5.1 million people at risk of starvation by early next year. The southern African nation, beset by incomprehensible rates of inflation and an agricultural crisis, is now facing what may be the single most severe food security crisis in the world. WFP has made the announcement in conjunction with a cut in aid to Zimbabwe, due to lack of funding and a failed drive to raise funds to increase aid to the troubled state.

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New Generation of Cellulosic Ethanol Could Avert Food-Price Fallout

June 24, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

The New Scientist magazine this week heralds a ‘plan B for biofuel’, making the case that starch-based ethanol fuels, like corn ethanol in the US, may drive up food prices, but a new generation of biofuels will sidestep the problem and help ethanol live up to its promise. “The corn required to fill an SUV tank with bioethanol just once could feed someone in Africa for a year” reports the UK-based magazine, but most biomass is not the starch currently being used to create bioethanol.

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World Facing Huge New Challenge on Food Front: Business-as-Usual Not a Viable Option

June 23, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

A fast-unfolding food shortage is engulfing the entire world, driving food prices to record highs. Over the past half-century grain prices have spiked from time to time because of weather-related events, such as the 1972 Soviet crop failure that led to a doubling of world wheat, rice, and corn prices. The situation today is entirely different, however. The current doubling of grain prices is trend-driven, the cumulative effect of some trends that are accelerating growth in demand and other trends that are slowing the growth in supply.

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Mugabe Forces Detain Rival, Attack Diplomats, Ban NGOs, Bar Opposition Rallies

June 7, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

In a not-too-thinly-veiled effort to rig the outcome of the 27 June runoff election, in which Robert Mugabe (Zanu-PF), incumbent with 28 years in power, will contest Morgan Tsvangirai (MDC), the Mugabe regime has attacked foreign diplomats looking into charges of state-sponsored violence, banned all NGOs from the country, cracked down on foreign press, and beaten and detained members of the opposition. Tsvangirai has been detained twice in the last week.

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Ziggurat Century: Global Civilization as the New Babel, with Reason for Hope

May 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

We are living in a time of unprecedented global integration, where economies, security interests, legal systems, and languages and systems of learning have been dispersed and interwoven across the globe. There are obvious positive effects to this integration, along with certain overarching and seemingly intractable problems that cause real worry for even the most hopeful or studied observers.

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Zimbabwe opposition refuses power-sharing gov’t under Mugabe; Philippines at epicenter of Asian rice crisis, food riots feared…

April 23, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

23 April :: Zimbabwe opposition refuses coalition gov’t headed by Mugabe; Mugabe’s Zanu-PF says it is planning for runoff election, not power-sharing; Tsvangirai’s MDC says it won the vote already held and will not accept any arrangement where Mugabe remains in power… Burgeoning Asian rice crisis attributed to economic planning focusing on modernization, devoting few [...]

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CPF Discussion on Food Supply Security in Africa

March 25, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

As part of the Crisis Policy Forum, the HotSpring collaborative innovation initiative is now planning an effort to tackle the problem of food supply management and chronic food and water scarcity in Africa. The lessons from this experiment in collaborative research will be applicable in many cases to other situations around the world, and we [...]

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Against the Good Nukes / Bad Nukes Fallacy

Cynicism often lends itself to the construction of intellectually convenient, overly facile descriptions of future events, which —bolstered by the impassioned worries and self-promotion of the cynic, the anti-prophet— quickly assume an air of prophetic certainty. Buoyed by the psychological satisfaction of carrying prophetic certainty within, the cynic then commits more and more fully to the proclamation of unshakeable doctrines about the future, based on bad-faith arguments and a passion for the despairing global outlook.

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