23 results on '"Wynberg, Rachel"'
Search Results
2. Power and networks in the shaping of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA).
- Author
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Vicedom, Stefan and Wynberg, Rachel
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GREEN Revolution , *GOVERNMENT policy , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
AGRA (formerly known as the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa) was founded in 2006 by the Rockefeller Foundation and the Gates Foundation to initiate agricultural transformation in Africa. Although critics have argued that AGRA’s approach insufficiently addresses the needs of African smallholder farmers, there has been little analysis of the broader politics and networks that shape AGRA, a gap this paper aims to fill. Using a network analysis and key informant interviews, we identify the actors that constitute AGRA’s network, and describe related power constellations. Our paper illustrates that AGRA’s network is dominated by foundations, intergovernmental organisations and corporations, with decision-making located within Global North institutions. We reveal that the alliance displays characteristics of an ideological advocacy network and conclude that it can be considered a neoliberal food regime. We suggest better control mechanisms to hold accountable organisations without a political mandate, and to increase the transparency of their activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Exploring local perceptions around the value of marine biodiversity: the case of kelp in the Western Cape, South Africa.
- Author
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Mehta, Akshata, Wynberg, Rachel, Ramcharan-Kotze, Chantal, and Smit, Albertus J.
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MARINE biodiversity , *VALUE (Economics) , *MARINE resource management , *MACROCYSTIS , *KELPS , *VALUATION , *EVIDENCE gaps - Abstract
Kelp are large seaweeds that provide a variety of contributions to humans and the environment. In South Africa, kelp forests are expanding as a consequence of climate change. Considering this expansion, assessing local perceptions and values around kelp's contributions may assist with the implementation of inclusive management strategies. The lack of consideration of non-market and non-use values is a gap in kelp valuation studies, with kelp ecosystems and their use rarely valued outside of classical economic valuation frameworks. This study sought to fill this research gap, intending to assess local perceptions about varied value dimensions associated with kelp using a pluralistic valuation approach. Drawing from a sample population of Recreational Users and/or Coastal Community Members, Environmental Managers and Conservationists, and Kelp and/or Abalone Industry, the study investigated perceptions of value towards kelp in the Western Cape region of South Africa. Results indicate that the perceived value of kelp extends far beyond its economic value as a harvested resource. Rather, individuals highly value kelp's ecological and social contributions, and have strong relational values towards kelp, recognizing its role in enhancing their quality of life and well-being. While most individuals did not display significant negative perceptions around kelp, some individuals in the Kelp and/or Abalone Industry indicated frustrations with kelp management strategies and kelp concession permit allocation processes. These findings highlight the need to incorporate local perceptions in integrated marine resource management solutions that recognize the plurality of values not only around kelp in the Western Cape but marine biodiversity at large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. How Access and Benefit Sharing Entrenches Inequity: The Case of Rooibos.
- Author
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Wynberg, Rachel, Ives, Sarah, and Bam, June
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TEA trade , *BIODIVERSITY , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *BIOPIRACY , *POWER (Social sciences) , *KHOISAN (African people) , *JUSTICE - Abstract
Benefit-sharing agreements are a new, prescriptive way of treating trade, biodiversity and the commercial use of traditional knowledge. However, these agreements have met with surprisingly little critique as a development paradigm. Through the lens of the industry around rooibos, a plant native to South Africa, we offer new, critical perspectives on the potential pitfalls of so-called access and benefit sharing (ABS) agreements. Rooibos underpins a well-established tea industry and was central to a much-lauded benefit-sharing agreement with Indigenous San and Khoi communities. We argue, however, that ABS as a model not only fails to challenge the engrained powers of state, capital, race and patriarchy, but even appears to legitimise (falsely) these powers because of its inability to grapple with local contexts and struggles over identity, representation and land. Despite its guise as an apolitical regulatory instrument, ABS entrenches existing marginalities, exclusions and structural inequities. Using a mixed methods approach that focuses on deep listening and draws from decades of research in the region, we demonstrate what happens when the depoliticising ABS framework collides with the complex and contentious politics of communities fractured by colonialism and apartheid. We conclude that ABS remains disconnected from, and structurally ignorant of, the wider political and economic struggles faced by marginalised communities. Aided by an intervening and complicit state, the agreements instead serve as legal compliance mechanisms that perpetuate epistemic injustices by maintaining a 'business as usual' approach without fundamentally shifting power relations or economic disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. Nature-Based Solutions and Agroecology: Business as Usual or an Opportunity for Transformative Change?
- Author
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Wynberg, Rachel, Pimbert, Michel, Moeller, Nina, McAllister, Georgina, Kerr, Rachel Bezner, Singh, Jasber, Belay, Million, and Ngcoya, Mvuselelo
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AGRICULTURAL ecology , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *PHYSICAL sciences , *PEARL millet , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *MANGROVE plants , *SOCIAL scientists - Published
- 2023
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6. Does tenure influence sustainable use? The ecological impacts of harvesting baobab (Adansonia digitata).
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Kozanayi, Witness, Wynberg, Rachel, and Hoffman, Michael Timm
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ADANSONIA digitata , *SUSTAINABILITY , *HARVESTING , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *ECOLOGICAL surveys , *NON-timber forest products - Abstract
Using the lens of the baobab tree, this paper explores the ecological outcomes of different tenurial arrangements and implications for resource sustainability. With the emergence of markets for baobab products, a central concern is to confirm whether use patterns differ across different tenure regimes and, if so, their ecological outcomes. The study is based on an ecological survey in Zimbabwe of 244 baobab trees located across three tenure regimes – communal, private and state – and also draws on interviews with key informants. The results suggest that tenure has a strong influence on the sustainability of baobab harvesting. Based on identified parameters of ecological sustainability, trees under state tenure were shown to be harvested unsustainably, and showed excessive bark harvesting, while those under private and communal tenure had fewer signs of debarking and produced more fruits, suggesting their use was more sustainable. Excessive bark harvesting was found to negatively affect fruit and bark production and, to a lesser extent, the overall health of the tree. The research illustrates that in order to understand ecologically sustainable use, an understanding of resource use patterns across different tenure regimes is crucial, suggesting the design of bespoke interventions to manage the use of natural resources in different tenure systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Rethink the expansion of access and benefit sharing.
- Author
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Laird, Sarah, Wynberg, Rachel, Rourke, Michelle, Humphries, Fran, Muller, Manuel Ruiz, and Lawson, Charles
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BIOLOGY , *MARINE biodiversity , *SCIENCE ,UNITED Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982) - Abstract
The article discusses United Nations (UN) policy processes are embracing access and benefit sharing (ABS) policy approach to biological conservation and equity in science. It mentions that several countries are negotiating a treaty under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to address governance gaps in the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ).
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- 2020
8. Developing and implementing policy for the mandatory labelling of genetically modified food in South Africa.
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de Beer, Taryn and Wynberg, Rachel
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CONSUMER law , *GENETICALLY modified food labeling laws , *GENETICALLY modified foods & the environment , *STAKEHOLDERS , *CONSUMER protection ,GENETICALLY modified food labeling - Abstract
The article focuses on the mandatory labelling for genetically modified (GM) foods introduced in South Africa. Under South Africa's Consumer Protection Act (No. 68 of 2008) (CPA) the mandatory GM labelling was introduced in in 2009. Some of the issues related to the development of the policy included the contentious nature of GM food labelling, its complexity, stakeholder opinions, and conflicted positions.
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- 2018
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9. Agroecology: The Future of Sustainable Farming?
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Pereira, Laura, Wynberg, Rachel, and Reis, Yuna
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SUSTAINABLE agriculture , *AGRICULTURAL ecology , *ALTERNATIVE agriculture , *FOOD production , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature - Abstract
The article talks about agroecology as the future to the sustainable farming. It discusses impact of rapid anthropogenic change on the earth and humanity. It states that industrial agriculture is touted as the only way to feed the world's growing population and provide nutrition for the people across the world. It also mentions that need to establish alternative agricultural pathways that maximize livelihood creation and sustainable food production.
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- 2018
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10. Traditional seed and exchange systems cement social relations and provide a safety net: A case study from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
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van Niekerk, Jaci and Wynberg, Rachel
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FOOD security , *FOOD supply , *AGRICULTURAL ecology , *AGRICULTURAL development , *SUSTAINABLE agriculture - Abstract
Millions of small-scale farmers on the African continent save and exchange the seed of their traditional crops, yet the social and cultural values of these systems remain under-researched. Through ethnographic research conducted in the KwaZulu-Natal Province of South Africa, this study sets out to improve understanding about the mechanisms and significance of traditional seed exchange networks. Findings suggest that traditional crops are central; their seed is highly valued; and systems of exchange play complex and nuanced roles. Critical for food sovereignty, these systems act as a back-up in the case of harvest failure, and enhance social cohesion through strengthening community and familial ties. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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11. Locating Responsible Research and Innovation Within Access and Benefit Sharing Spaces of the Convention on Biological Diversity: the Challenge of Emerging Technologies.
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Laird, Sarah and Wynberg, Rachel
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RESEARCH ethics , *BIODIVERSITY , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *SYNTHETIC biology , *BIOENGINEERING - Abstract
This paper reviews the location of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) approaches within the access and benefit sharing (ABS) policy spaces of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and Nagoya Protocol. We describe how a range of dialogues on ethical research practices found a home, almost inadvertently, within the ABS policy process. However, more recent RRI dialogues around emerging technologies have not been similarly absorbed into ABS policy, due in part to the original framing of ABS and associated definitional and scope issues. Consideration is given to the challenges posed to these policy processes by the transformative and rapid nature of scientific and technological change today, including the emerging field of synthetic biology. Drawing on experiences from regulating ABS, we emphasize that the integration of RRI into policies for new, emerging, or poorly understood activities such as synthetic biology faces deficiencies such as limits to government capacity, jurisdictional confusion, shortages in funds, and an absence of strategic approaches. We conclude that a coordinated combination of diverse policy processes within the CBD might provide an invaluable space for RRI dialogues on social justice, sustainability, biosafety, and other issues raised by emerging technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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12. Fast Science and Sluggish Policy: The Herculean Task of Regulating Biodiscovery.
- Author
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Wynberg, Rachel and Laird, Sarah A.
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GERMPLASM , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL technology , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *BIOPROSPECTING - Abstract
New rules for access and benefit sharing (ABS) of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge have been established by the Nagoya Protocol but have not kept up with rapid scientific and technological advances in biodiscovery. This suggests the need for innovative, transdisciplinary approaches to regulate ABS and emerging technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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13. Formalization of the Natural Product Trade in Southern Africa: Unintended Consequences and Policy Blurring in Biotrade and Bioprospecting.
- Author
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Wynberg, Rachel, Laird, Sarah, Van Niekerk, Jaci, and Kozanayi, Witness
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ECONOMICS , *SUSTAINABILITY , *BIOPROSPECTING , *ECONOMIC policy , *RAW materials , *SMALL business , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Concerns about ecological sustainability and inequality are driving increased formalization of the natural product trade, including both biotrade of bulk, raw materials (or nontimber forest products [NTFPs]) and bioprospecting for genetic resources. However, there has been little interrogation as to whether the policy tools used to achieve sustainability and equity goals are appropriate and effective. This article addresses this gap by examining efforts to formalize biotrade, including the blurred regulatory lines that increasingly exist between biotrade and bioprospecting. Two case studies are explored from southern Africa—baobab andPelargonium. Findings emphasize the unintended consequences that can arise from overregulation and poorly formulated laws, including the further marginalization of women and/or poor communities; elite capture; weakening small businesses; and leakage across political boundaries. Conclusions underpin the need to pursue solutions that are better informed and more respectful of local knowledge and needs, and that draw upon both customary and statutory laws and institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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14. People, Power, and the Coast: a Conceptual Framework for Understanding and Implementing Benefit Sharing.
- Author
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Wynberg, Rachel and Hauck, Maria
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BIOTIC communities , *NATURAL resources management , *SUSTAINABLE development , *EQUALITY research , *ECOLOGICAL research - Abstract
The concept of benefit sharing has seen growing adoption in recent years by a variety of sectors. However, its conceptual underpinnings, definitions, and framework remain poorly articulated and developed. We aim to help address this gap by presenting a new conceptual approach for enhancing understanding about benefit sharing and its implementation. We use the coast as a lens through which the analysis is framed because of the intricate governance challenges which coastal social-ecological systems present, the increasing development and exploitation pressures on these systems, and the growing need to improve understanding about the way in which greater equity and reduced inequalities could reduce conflicts, protect coastal ecosystems, and ensure greater social justice. Key elements of the framework include the range of actors involved, the natural resources they access and use, the interventions introduced to redistribute benefits, and the benefits and losses that result from these interventions. The framework underscores the importance of process in determining who gets what, as well as the wider institutional, political, social, and economic context. Power relations and imbalances underpin many of these elements and remain the central reason for benefits being distributed in the way that they are. The framework has relevance and application for coastal livelihoods, rural governance, and resource sustainability in a context in which community rights are increasingly undermined through land grabbing, unequal power relations, and externally driven development interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. The trade in Pelargonium sidoides : Rural livelihood relief or bounty for the ‘bio-buccaneers’?
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van Niekerk, Jaci and Wynberg, Rachel
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PELARGONIUMS , *RURAL development , *BIOPROSPECTING , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *FOREST products industry , *BIODIVERSITY , *SUSTAINABILITY ,RESPIRATORY infection treatment - Abstract
Historically, the trade benefits of medicinal plants have been skewed towards technologically advanced Northern countries, despite originating from the biologically rich South. Since the 1990s, attempts at rectifying this situation have been stepped up globally. In southern Africa, a substantial industry has developed around the use of the endemic plant Pelargonium sidoides as a cure for respiratory tract infections. Rural communities harvest the plant for trade and also hold traditional knowledge about it. However, the industry has been plagued by concerns about the sustainability of the resource and equitable sharing of benefits, and accusations of ‘biopiracy’. This study examines the value chain to identify blockages preventing better benefit capture by the rural poor. We conclude that the Biodiversity Convention offers opportunities for redress but that monopolistic control, complex and uncoordinated laws, elite capture of benefits and increased cultivation undermine benefit sharing. These problems need to be overcome if rural communities are not to lose their benefits to large corporations exploiting Pelargonium sidoides. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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16. Bioprospecting.
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Wynberg, Rachel and Laied, Sarah
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PROSPECTING , *BIODIVERSITY , *NATURAL resource policy , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *HOODIA , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation on environmental policy , *ECONOMICS , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The article profiles government policies concerning so-called bioprospecting, where plants and natural resources are invested in for their perceived social benefits. The article discusses a range of issues, including the historical context, regulatory frameworks, the commercial use of biodiversity, access to biodiversity and the sharing of benefits, key policy issues, and a case study concerning the African plant Hoodia. The author also comments on the economic impact of bioprospecting on developing countries.
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- 2007
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17. A decade of biodiversity conservation and use in South Africa: tracking progress from the Rio Earth Summit to the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development.
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Wynberg, Rachel
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BIODIVERSITY , *ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity - Abstract
Focuses on a study which analyzed key achievements, gaps, constraints and opportunities within South Africa's biodiversity sector since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, and some of the difficult trade-offs faced in attempting to marry the country's pressing development needs with those of conservation. Legislative, policy and institutional framework for biodiversity management in the country; Habitat transformation and biodiversity planning; Overview of alien invasive species.
- Published
- 2002
18. Disturbance associated with bait-collection for sandprawns (Callianassa kraussi) and mudprawns...
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Wynberg, Rachel P. and Branch, George M.
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SHRIMP fisheries , *MARINE sediments , *MARINE animals , *FISHERIES & the environment - Abstract
Analyzes the effects on marine sediment and marine fauna of disturbance associated with experimental prawn-collecting. Intertidal sandflats; Structure of marine soft-bottom communities; Patterns of recovery.
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- 1994
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19. The sustainable use of wild species benefits AUTHORS: biodiversity and human well-being in South Africa.
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Mograbi, Penelope J., Archer, Emma, Fabricius, Christo, Wynberg, Rachel, and Donaldson, John
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The article presents the discussion on sustainable use of wild species benefitting biodiversity and human well-being in South Africa. Topics include South Africa's National Development Plan 2030 reducing poverty and inequality supporting more inclusive rural and urban economies; and enabling South African perspectives informing the global assessment and policy recommendations.
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- 2023
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20. Bitter Roots: The Search for Healing Plants in Africa.
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WYNBERG, RACHEL
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MEDICINAL plants , *MATERIA medica , *NONFICTION , *HISTORY - Published
- 2016
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21. Losing practices, relationships and agency: ecological deskilling as a consequence of the uptake of modern seed varieties among South African Smallholders.
- Author
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Marshak, Maya, Wickson, Fern, Herrero, Amaranta, and Wynberg, Rachel
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ORGANIC farming , *FOOD sovereignty , *AGRICULTURAL development , *CORN farming , *SEEDS , *SMALL farms - Abstract
Technological changes embedded in the processes of agrarian modernization have profoundly reshaped agricultural environments, practices, discourses and institutions worldwide. This article explores how social–ecological relations shift in agricultural practices following the introduction of modern seed varieties, including hybrid and genetically modified (GM) seeds and their co-technologies. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic work in smallholder maize farms in South Africa, we introduce the concept of ecological deskilling in agriculture and describe three dimensions related to it: loss of ecologically based practices, loss of relational knowledge, and loss of socio-ecological agency. Our findings suggest that the introduction of modern seed varieties may contribute to the process of ecological deskilling due to the disruption of the co-evolution of knowledge between smallholder farmers and agroecological environments. We argue that this form of deskilling can undermine food sovereignty and farmers' agency. It can also narrow future possibilities and pathways for sustainable agricultural development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. Biodiversity and patents: Overview of plants and fungi covered by patents.
- Author
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Simmonds, Monique S. J., Fang, Rui, Wyatt, Lilybelle, Bell, Elizabeth, Allkin, Bob, Forest, Felix, Wynberg, Rachel, Silva, Manuela, Zhang, Ben Gang, Shi Liu, Jiu, Dong Qi, Yao, and Demissew, Sebsebe
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BIODIVERSITY , *PATENTS , *PLANT ecology , *SOCIAL impact , *PLANT-fungus relationships - Abstract
Social Impact Statement: Patents can be used as a measure of innovation and to illustrate the commercial potential of plant and fungal biodiversity. The proportion of plant species named in patents represents only 6.2% of plant species, whereas the proportion of fungi is likely less than 0.4%. Fungi clearly justify further research. Innovation on a species usually drives more innovation on that species. We suggest that we should ensure that commercialization frameworks encourage studies on a greater diversity of plants and fungi. This could not only increase the range of biodiversity‐based products and associated income but also incentivize their conservation and encourage more fundamental research. Summary: In this review, patents are used as a measure of innovation, and data show that a low proportion of plant and fungal biodiversity is mentioned in patents. The proportion of plant species named in patents represents only 6.2% of plant species, whereas the proportion of fungi is most likely less than 0.4%. The number of species within a plant family mentioned in patents varies greatly. The following families having the greatest numbers: Asteraceae with 1,445 species (4.5% of species), Fabaceae with 1,299 species (5.8%), Poaceae with 1,008 species (8.5%), and Rosaceae with 718 species (12.7%). Case studies from Brazil, Ethiopia, and South Africa explore some of the controversies associated with patenting, especially when patents have not taken prior art into account. In contrast, a case study on plants and fungi used in traditional Chinese medicine illustrates their economic value and their potential to support new innovations. Innovative ways to use plant and fungal biodiversity has the potential to generate wealth, reduce poverty, improve human well‐being and in theory incentivize biodiversity conservation. International and national policies and laws that aim to facilitate equitable benefit‐sharing associated with access to and use of genetic diversity need to be reviewed to help facilitate innovation, as well as ensure that the rights of communities to use these resources are recognized and supported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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23. The next decade of environmental science in South Africa: a horizon scan.
- Author
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Shackleton, CharlieM., Scholes, BobJ., Vogel, Coleen, Wynberg, Rachel, Abrahamse, Tanya, Shackleton, SheonaE., Ellery, Fred, and Gambiza, James
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ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *WATER efficiency , *FOOD security , *AGRICULTURAL chemicals , *CLIMATE change , *ECOLOGICAL systems theory - Abstract
Environmental systems are in constant flux, with feedbacks and non-linearities catalysed by natural trends and shocks as well as human actions. This poses challenges for sustainable management to promote human well-being. It requires environmental understanding and application that can accommodate such fluxes and pressures, as well as knowledge production systems and institutions that produce graduates with appropriate skills. In this article we consider these challenges in the South African context. Firstly, we summarise six significant environmental realisations from the last decade of environmental science internationally and question what they mean for the teaching of environmental science and research into environmental systems in South Africa in the near future. We then consider these lessons within the context of a horizon scan of near-term pressing environmental issues in South Africa. These include water-use efficiency, poverty, food security, inequities in land and resource access, urbanisation, agrochemicals and water quality, promoting human well-being and economic adaptability in the face of climate change, and imbuing stronger environmental elements and stewardship into the integrated development planning processes and outcomes. Lastly, we consider the knowledge areas and skills that environmental graduates will require to be able to confront these problems in South Africa and simultaneously contribute to international debates and understandings around the complexity of environmental systems and how to manage them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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