Green | July 30, 2008 | 12 comments

Small Farmers, Ecofeminism, Vandana Shiva

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JanforGore
For more than a century, farms have been getting bigger while seeds, fertilization and pest control have been getting more uniform. Led by farm suppliers, it has raised productivity. But negative byproducts of this trend include increasing chemical dependence and loss of biodiversity. Ecofeminist Vandana Shiva is at the Organic World Congress to protest the human and environmental cost of monoculture. The pendulum may be swinging back her way as consumer preference (among "locavores") for locally grown food and organic food increases, as the public becomes more aware of the impact of chemicals on the environment, and as higher petroleum prices result in pricier fertilizers and pesticides.

Vandana is one of the speakers at the opening ceremony of the Organic World Congress in Modena's large Piazza Grande, which fills the center of the city behind the famed (Michelin three-starred) Romanesque Duomo, shown below earlier in the day as the seats were being set up.

An eloquent defender of the property rights of small farms in India and other countries, Vandana has devoted much of her life to research on the effects of loss of biodiversity resulting from monoculture and has allied herself with the Slow Food Movement. Her books include The Violence of the Green Revolution and Monocultures of the Mind. She decided that science was not serving the interests of small farmers, so she left the academic world and formed her own organization, Navdanya.

Because she associates monoculture with a masculine wish to dominate -- and sees it as threatening both small farmers and biodiversity in the name of temporarily higher productivity -- Vandana has been called an ecofeminist, a term attributed to the late Francoise d'Eaubonne describing someone resistant to abuse of either women or mother nature, and adds in empathy for the small farmer in developing countries.

Small-farm consolidation continues, as was highlighted in South Africa just this week. The Valley Trust has for years been working with rural communities to provide health and other services and support organic farms. It has recently broken ranks with the South African Department of Agriculture for its pressure on small-scale farmers to join cooperatives. Small farmers are promised financial help, farm equipment, water piping and free seeds in return for joining the larger farming unit. The catch is that the small farmer must plant genetically modified seeds, which create farmer dependence on commercial monoculture. The director of Biowatch, an NGO promoting alternatives to GMO farming, says: "In the end, most farmers end up in huge debt, because they can't save seeds and are obliged to buy the matching GM fertilizers and pesticides" .
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Dr. Shiva was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 2005. I think she should be nominated again and win in this year for her work to sow seeds of hope and peace in place of the seeds of deception and environmental destruction that have been planted by Monsanto.
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12 comments // Small Farmers, Ecofeminism, Vandana Shiva

  • wholefreespirit
  • JanforGore
  • whocontrolstheworld
  • GavinTheMother
    • 0
      GavinTheMother  
    • It has been shown that humanitarian efforts are better off when focusing on giving to women. I don't think it matters, man or woman, when you enter the power politics realm. Pelosi etc.

    • 3 years ago
  • twodee
  • gentjim
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Image
    • This is a discussion with Dr. Shiva from the late nineties, in which she talks about Monsanto's water priivitization. It only illustrates how long Monsanto has been trying to get its claws into India.

    • 3 years ago
  • Vierotchka
    • 0
      Vierotchka  
    • In this lecture at Michigan State University, environmental activist, author, and eco-feminist Vandana Shiva talks about her environmental activism. Rooted in a discussion of environmental struggles in her home country of India, Shiva expands her discussion by placing environmental activism into a larger context of globalization and capitalism. Shiva offers an interesting critique of market defined "sustainability" before moving into a lengthy discussion of corporate attempts--such as those by Monsanto and Coca-Cola--to privatize water.

    • 3 years ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • She is a voice for those in our world whose voices have been stifled. I simply love her. Her book, Water Wars is a must read. India is being bombarded now not only by Monsanto in regards to controlling their food, but also in regards to privtizing and controlling the water that waters the crops... that is, the water available now that India has been in a drought condition. For anyone to not htink Monsanto is an evil company, surely they either do not understand the full implications of what they are doing, or they do not want to.

    • 3 years ago
  • twodee
    • 0
      twodee  
    • women should be running countries. Not men. ..and this is David of Twodee saying that....although I think my wife would agree.

    • 3 years ago
  • Vierotchka
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