GMOs for Africa?
Rather than addressing food scarcity, genetically modified crops may render African farmers and scientists more, not less, reliant on global markets.
8 Articles by:
Joeva Rock is Assistant Professor of Development Studies at Cambridge University.
Rather than addressing food scarcity, genetically modified crops may render African farmers and scientists more, not less, reliant on global markets.
Plutôt que de pallier l’insécurité alimentaire, les cultures génétiquement modifiées risquent de rendre les agriculteurs et les scientifiques africains plus, et non moins, dépendants des marchés mondiaux.
Centering African voices in a discussion so often dominated by non-African observers.
The involvement of far right and conservative think tanks in developing Trump’s Africa agenda.
Why agricultural change is political change. Take the case of farmers in Burkina Faso.
The time is ripe to ask not “does aid work,” but “how does aid work?”
As Ghana moves forward with a US military agreement, one group seeks to challenge the country’s political direction.
Is the US military on its way to Ghana to set up base? What do Ghanaians think.