Agriculture, Biodiversity and Markets: Livelihoods and Agroecology in Comparative Perspective / Edition 1

Agriculture, Biodiversity and Markets: Livelihoods and Agroecology in Comparative Perspective / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1844077764
ISBN-13:
9781844077762
Pub. Date:
12/16/2009
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
ISBN-10:
1844077764
ISBN-13:
9781844077762
Pub. Date:
12/16/2009
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Agriculture, Biodiversity and Markets: Livelihoods and Agroecology in Comparative Perspective / Edition 1

Agriculture, Biodiversity and Markets: Livelihoods and Agroecology in Comparative Perspective / Edition 1

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Overview

Debate about how best to ensure the preservation of agricultural biodiversity is caught in a counter-productive polemic between proponents and critics of market-based instruments and agricultural modernisation. This book argues that neither position does justice to the range of strategies that farmers use to manage agrobiodiversity and other livelihood assets as they adapt to changing social, economic, and environmental circumstances. Chapters explore relationships between the exploitation and conservation of agricultural biodiversity and the livelihoods of agricultural communities, and evaluate the capacity of national and multilateral institutions and policy settings to support the protection and capture by communities of agrobiodiversity values. The place of ecosystem services in valuing biodiversity in the marketplace is emphasized. A number of authors assess the potential for market-based instruments and initiatives to encourage the protection of biodiversity, while others compare agrobiodiversity/community relationships, and the effectiveness of instruments designed to enhance these, across international boundaries.

The book takes a comparative approach, drawing on empirical case studies from across the developed and developing worlds. In doing so, the book does not simply point to similarities and differences in the experience of rural communities. It also shows how global trade and multilateral institutions bring these otherwise disparate communities together in networks that exploit and/or preserve agrobiodiversity and other resources.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781844077762
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 12/16/2009
Edition description: 1
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Stewart Lockie is Professor of Sociology in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University.

David Carpenter works in the area of East Asian regional policy at the Australian Agency for International Development; prior to that he was a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Social Science Research, Central Queensland University.

Table of Contents

Contributors Preface

1. Agriculture, Biodiversity And Markets

Part I: Agrobiodiversity in Context

2. The Ecological Role and Enhancement of Biodiversity in Agroecosystems 3. The Human Ecology of Agrobiodiversity

4. Multilateral and National Regulatory Regimes for Agrobiodiversity

5. Plant Breeders' Rights and On-Farm Seed-Saving

6. International Biosecurity Frameworks to Protect Biodiversity with Emphasis on Science and Risk Assessment

Part II: Agriobiodiversity and Modernization

7. Complementarity in the Conservation of Traditional and Modern Rice Genetic Resources on the Philippine Island of Bohol

8. The Contribution of Biodiversity to Modern Intensive Farming Systems

9. Genetic Erosion and Degradation of Ecosystem Services of Wetland Rice Fields: A Case Study from Western Ghats, India

Part III: Agrobiodiversity, Standards and Markets

10. Environmental Certification: Standardization for Diversity

11. Challenges of Global Environmental Governance by Non-state Actors in the Coffee Industry: Insights from India, Indonesia and Vietnam

12. Geographical Indicators

13. Value Chain Coordination for Agroiodiversity Conservation

Part IV: Agrobiodiversity and Payment for Ecological Services

14. Paying for Biodiversity Conservation in Agricultural Landscapes

15. Targeting Payments for Ecological Services

16. The 'Green Box': Multifunctionality and Biodiversity Conservation in Europe

17. Market Instruments and Collective Obligations for On-Farm Biodiversity Conservation

CONCLUSION

18. Agrobiodiversity and Sustainable Farm Livelihoods: Policy Implications and Imperatives

Index

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