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OverviewA first-of-its-kind, investigative expos reveals the motives behind the unprecedented land grab taking place around the world. Fearing future food shortages and the over-financialization of the stock market, the world has spent the last few years buying and leasing vast swaths of foreign soil. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Fred PearcePublisher: Beacon Press Imprint: Beacon Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9780807003411ISBN 10: 0807003417 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 26 March 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction Part one : land wars Chapter 1 Gambella, Ethiopia Tragedy in the Commons Chapter 2 Chicago, U.S.A. The Price of Food Chapter 3 Saudi Arabia Plowing in the Petrodollars Chapter 4 South Sudan Up the Nile with the Capitalists of Chaos Part two : White Men in Africa Chapter 5 Yala Swamp, Kenya One Man’s Dominion Chapter 6 Liberia The Resource Curse Chapter 7 Palm Bay, Liberia Return of the Oil Palm Chapter 8 London, England Pinstripes and Pitchforks Part three : Across the Globe Chapter 9 Ukraine Lebensraum Chapter 10 Western Bahia, Brazil Soylandia Chapter 11 Chaco, Paraguay Chaco Apocalyptico Chapter 12 Latin America The New Conquistadors Chapter 13 Patagonia The Last Place on Earth Chapter 14 Australia Under the Shade of a Coolibah Tree Part four : China ’s backyard Chapter 15 Sumatra, Indonesia Pulping the Jungle Chapter 16 Papua New Guinea “A Truly Wild Island” Chapter 17 Cambodia Sweet and Sour Chapter 18 Southeast Asia Rubber Hits the Road to China Part five : African dreams Chapter 19 Maasailand, Tanzania The White People’s Place Chapter 20 South Africa Green Grab Chapter 21 Africa The Second Great Trek Chapter 22 Mozambique The Biofuels Bubble Chapter 23 Zimbabwe On the Fast Track Part six : the last enclosure Chapter 24 Central Africa Laws of the Jungle Chapter 25 Inner Niger Delta, Mali West African Water Grab Chapter 26 Badia, Jordan On the Commons Chapter 27 London, England Feeding the World notes on sources indexReviewsPearce may be the only person to visit all the critical frontlines worldwide, and his brilliant reporting makes the abstraction real. Probably the most important environmental book anyone could read right now. --Timothy Searchinger, fellow, German Marshall Fund; research scholar, Princeton University Compelling and well-researched ... Dissects the modern rush to acquire land for production, investment, speculation or preservation. --Wendy Wolford, Nature Raises complex and urgent issues. --Booklist, starred review A thorough and enlightening expose. --Conservation A well-researched, informative and accessible look at important economic and agricultural issues. --Kirkus Reviews This is just what the world has been waiting for--a detailed overview of the land grabs that are the principal manifestation of a new geopolitics of food. --Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute and author of World on the Edge The remarkable Fred Pearce has done it again: in The Land Grabbers he opens up vastly important new terrain few of us have even noticed. When the rich and powerful start buying up the planet's fundamental resources--land and water--from the poor and vulnerable, we'd all better notice. --James Gustave Speth, author of The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability Wherever on this earth poor villagers, agribusiness magnates, ignorant or corrupt governments, petrodollars, commodity traders and hungry multitudes come together, Fred Pearce is at the nexus, brilliantly reporting on the biggest swindle of the 21st century. With the modern landgrab, the enclosure movement has attained planetary proportions and Pearce is without peer in describing the dire consequences of this ongoing human and environmental disaster. --Susan George, author, Hijacking America, board president, the Transnational Institute In The Land Grabbers, Pearce has produced a powerful piece of journalism that illuminates how the drive for expanded food production is transfomring the planet. anyone who cares where her next meal is coming from should read it. -Washington Post Pearce may be the only person to visit all the critical frontlines worldwide, and his brilliant reporting makes the abstraction real. Probably the most important environmental book anyone could read right now. --Timothy Searchinger, fellow, German Marshall Fund; research scholar, Princeton University <br> Compelling and well-researched ... Dissects the modern rush to acquire land for production, investment, speculation or preservation. --Wendy Wolford, Nature <br> Raises complex and urgent issues. -- Booklist, starred review <br> A thorough and enlightening expose. -- Conservation <br> A well-researched, informative and accessible look at important economic and agricultural issues. -- Kirkus Reviews <br> This is just what the world has been waiting for--a detailed overview of the land grabs that are the principal manifestation of a new geopolitics of food. --Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute and author of World on the Edge <br> The remarkable Fred Pearce has done it again: in The Land Grabbers he opens up vastly important new terrain few of us have even noticed. When the rich and powerful start buying up the planet's fundamental resources--land and water--from the poor and vulnerable, we'd all better notice. --James Gustave Speth, author of The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability <br> Wherever on this earth poor villagers, agribusiness magnates, ignorant or corrupt governments, petrodollars, commodity traders and hungry multitudes come together, Fred Pearce is at the nexus, brilliantly reporting on the biggest swindle of the 21st century. With the modern landgrab, the enclosure movement has attained planetary proportions and Pearce is without peer in describing the dire consequences of this ongoing human and environmental disaster. --Susan George, author, Hijacking America, board president, the Transnational Institute<br> <br> In The Land Pearce may be the only person to visit all the critical frontlines worldwide, and his brilliant reporting makes the abstraction real. Probably the most important environmental book anyone could read right now. --Timothy Searchinger, fellow, German Marshall Fund; research scholar, Princeton University Compelling and well-researched ... Dissects the modern rush to acquire land for production, investment, speculation or preservation. --Wendy Wolford, Nature Raises complex and urgent issues. -- Booklist, starred review A thorough and enlightening expose. -- Conservation A well-researched, informative and accessible look at important economic and agricultural issues. -- Kirkus Reviews This is just what the world has been waiting for--a detailed overview of the land grabs that are the principal manifestation of a new geopolitics of food. --Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute and author of World on the Edge The remarkable Fred Pearce has done it again: in The Land Grabbers he opens up vastly important new terrain few of us have even noticed. When the rich and powerful start buying up the planet's fundamental resources--land and water--from the poor and vulnerable, we'd all better notice. --James Gustave Speth, author of The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability Wherever on this earth poor villagers, agribusiness magnates, ignorant or corrupt governments, petrodollars, commodity traders and hungry multitudes come together, Fred Pearce is at the nexus, brilliantly reporting on the biggest swindle of the 21st century. With the modern landgrab, the enclosure movement has attained planetary proportions and Pearce is without peer in describing the dire consequences of this ongoing human and environmental disaster. --Susan George, author, Hijacking America, board president, the Transnational Institute In The Land Pearce may be the only person to visit all the critical frontlines worldwide, and his brilliant reporting makes the abstraction real. Probably the most important environmental book anyone could read right now. --Timothy Searchinger, fellow, German Marshall Fund; research scholar, Princeton University Compelling and well-researched ... Dissects the modern rush to acquire land for production, investment, speculation or preservation. --Wendy Wolford, Nature Raises complex and urgent issues. -- Booklist, starred review A thorough and enlightening expose. -- Conservation A well-researched, informative and accessible look at important economic and agricultural issues. -- Kirkus Reviews This is just what the world has been waiting for--a detailed overview of the land grabs that are the principal manifestation of a new geopolitics of food. --Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute and author of World on the Edge The remarkable Fred Pearce has done it again: in The Land Grabbers he opens up vastly important new terrain few of us have even noticed. When the rich and powerful start buying up the planet's fundamental resources--land and water--from the poor and vulnerable, we'd all better notice. --James Gustave Speth, author of The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability Wherever on this earth poor villagers, agribusiness magnates, ignorant or corrupt governments, petrodollars, commodity traders and hungry multitudes come together, Fred Pearce is at the nexus, brilliantly reporting on the biggest swindle of the 21st century. With the modern landgrab, the enclosure movement has attained planetary proportions and Pearce is without peer in describing the dire consequences of this ongoing human and environmental disaster. --Susan George, author, Hijacking America, board president, the Transnational Institute In The Land Author InformationFred Pearce is an award-winning author and journalist based in London. He has reported on environment, science, and development issues from sixty-seven countries over the past twenty years. Environment consultant at New Scientist since 1992, he also writes regularly for the Guardian newspaper and Yale University’s prestigious e360 website. Pearce was voted UK Environment Journalist of the Year in 2001 and CGIAR agricultural research journalist of the year in 2002, and won a lifetime achievement award from the Association of British Science Writers in 2011. His many books include With Speed and Violence, Confessions of an Eco-Sinner, The Coming Population Crash, and When the Rivers Run Dry. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |