Traditional/Indigenous culture helps with climate change adaptation: report
source: http://www.modernghana.com/news/358463/1/with-food-and-climate-change-policymakers-risk-bet....
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- JanforGore
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It urges negotiators at the UN climate change conference in Durban later this month to give stronger support to traditional knowledge and address the threats posed by commercial agriculture and intellectual property rights.
The paper includes case studies from Bolivia, China and Kenya that show traditional knowledge and local farming systems have proved vital in adapting to the climatic changes that farmers there face.
This includes using local plants to control pests, choosing traditional crop varieties that tolerate extreme conditions such as droughts and floods, planting a diversity of crops to hedge bets against uncertain futures, breeding new varieties based on quality traits, and having systems in place to protect biological diversity and share seeds within and between communities.
But the paper warns that government policies tend to overlook such knowledge and fail to protect farmers' rights to grow traditional crops, benefit from their use and access markets.
“Policies, subsidies, research and intellectual property rights promote a few modern commercial varieties and intensive agriculture at the expense of traditional crops and practices,” says the paper's lead author Krystyna Swiderska, a senior researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development.
“This is perverse as it forces countries and communities to depend on an ever decreasing variety of crops and threatens with extinction the knowledge and biological diversity that form the foundations of resilience.”
The paper says that while modern agriculture and varieties may increase productivity, environmental stress and climatic variability mean the survival of poor farmers depends on more resilient and readily available traditional varieties.
“It is because of famers' intimate knowledge of nature that traditional farming practices have persisted for thousands of years and overcome climatic threats,” adds Swiderska.
“To sweep away all of that knowledge and the biological diversity it relates to in favour of a limited set of modern seed varieties means putting the private interests of commercial seed corporations ahead of the public interest of sustaining food and agriculture.”
More at the link
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JanforGore
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Sometimes it is best not to forget from where we came. It may well also be the way to move us forward.
The time has come to put behind this argument as to whether humans are causing the proliferation of these effects. We must come together as humans to adapt to these changes or we will simply quicken our own demise. Time to dispense with labels, biases, poiltics and prejudices and see the signs that are right in front of us. At Durban, South Africa at COP 17, humans gathering there can truly make this the time we actually deal with this moral crisis the right way. Let the wisdom of the indigenous people of our world be heard.
- 1 year ago
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JanforGore