Soybeans and Power

Soybeans and Power
Author: Pablo Lapegna
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2016
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0190215135

Although Argentina's use of genetically modified (GM) soybean seeds has spurred a major agricultural boom, it has also had a negative impact on many communities. In Soybeans and Power, Pablo Lapegna explores the ways in which these communities have coped with GM soybean expansion. Peasants initially resisted, yet ultimately adapted to the new agricultural technologies, playing an active role in their own demobilization in order to maneuver the situation to their advantage. A rare glimpse into the life cycle of a social movement, Soybeans and Power gives voice to the communities most adversely affected by GM technology and the strategies that they have enacted in order to survive.

Seeds of Power

Seeds of Power
Author: Amalia Leguizamón
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2020-09-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1478012374

In 1996 Argentina adopted genetically modified (GM) soybeans as a central part of its national development strategy. Today, Argentina is the third largest global grower and exporter of GM crops. Its soybeans—which have been modified to tolerate being sprayed with herbicides—now cover half of the country's arable land and represent a third of its total exports. While soy has brought about modernization and economic growth, it has also created tremendous social and ecological harm: rural displacement, concentration of landownership, food insecurity, deforestation, violence, and the negative health effects of toxic agrochemical exposure. In Seeds of Power Amalia Leguizamón explores why Argentines largely support GM soy despite the widespread damage it creates. She reveals how agribusiness, the state, and their allies in the media and sciences deploy narratives of economic redistribution, scientific expertise, and national identity as a way to elicit compliance among the country’s most vulnerable rural residents. In this way, Leguizamón demonstrates that GM soy operates as a tool of power to obtain consent, to legitimate injustice, and to quell potential dissent in the face of environmental and social violence.

The Political Economy of Agricultural Booms

The Political Economy of Agricultural Booms
Author: Mariano Turzi
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2016-11-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 3319459465

This book offers an in-depth analysis of the political economy of soybean production in Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay, by identifying the dominant private and public actors and control mechanisms that have given rise to a corporate-driven, vertically integrated system of regionalized agricultural production in the Southern Cone of South America. The current agricultural boom surrounding soybean production has been aided by aggressive new agro-technologies, including biotechnology, leading to massive organizational changes in the agricultural sector and a significant rise in the power of special interest groups and corporations. Despite having similar initial production conditions, the pattern of economic activity surrounding soybean production in Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay, continues to be largely determined by the needs of the multinational corporations involved, rather than national considerations of comparative advantage. The author uses these findings to argue that the new international model of agricultural production empowers chemical and trading multinational companies over national governments.

The Story of Soy

The Story of Soy
Author: Christine M. Du Bois
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2018-04-15
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 1780239653

The humble soybean is the world’s most widely grown and most traded oilseed. And though found in everything from veggie burgers to cosmetics, breakfast cereals to plastics, soy is also a poorly understood crop often viewed in extreme terms—either as a superfood or a deadly poison. In this illuminating book, Christine M. Du Bois reveals soy’s hugely significant role in human history as she traces the story of soy from its domestication in ancient Asia to the promise and peril ascribed to it in the twenty-first century. Traveling across the globe and through millennia, The Story of Soy includes a cast of fascinating characters as vast as the soy fields themselves—entities who’ve applauded, experimented with, or despised soy. From Neolithic villagers to Buddhist missionaries, European colonialists, Japanese soldiers, and Nazi strategists; from George Washington Carver to Henry Ford, Monsanto, and Greenpeace; from landless peasants to petroleum refiners, Du Bois explores soy subjects as diverse as its impact on international conflicts, its role in large-scale meat production and disaster relief, its troubling ecological impacts, and the nutritional controversies swirling around soy today. She also describes its genetic modification, the scandals and pirates involved in the international trade in soybeans, and the potential of soy as an intriguing renewable fuel. Featuring compelling historical and contemporary photographs, The Story of Soy is a potent reminder never to underestimate the importance of even the most unprepossesing sprout.

Soy, Globalization, and Environmental Politics in South America

Soy, Globalization, and Environmental Politics in South America
Author: Gustavo de L. T. Oliveira
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 446
Release: 2017-10-24
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1351583743

Soy in South America constitutes one of the most spectacular booms of agro-industrial commodity production in the world. It is the pinnacle of modernist agro-industrial practices, serving as a key nexus in food–feed–fuel production that underpins the agribusiness–conservationist discourse of "land sparing" through intensification. Yet soy production is implicated in multiple problems beyond deforestation, ranging from pesticide drift and contamination to social exclusion and conflicts in frontier zones, to concentration of wealth and income among the largest landowners and corporations. This book explores in depth the complex dynamics of soy production from its diverse social settings to its transnational connections, examining the politics of commodity and knowledge production, the role of the state, and the reach of corporate power in everyday life across soy landscapes in South America. Ultimately, the collection encourages us to search and struggle for agroecological alternatives through which we may overcome the pitfalls of this massive transnational capitalist agro-industry. This book was originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Peasant Studies.

Soybeans

Soybeans
Author: Lawrence A. Johnson
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 853
Release: 2015-08-08
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0128043520

This comprehensive new soybean reference book disseminates key soybean information to “drive success for soybeans via 23 concise chapters covering all aspects of soybeans--from genetics, breeding and quality to post-harvest management, marketing and utilization (food and energy applications), U.S. domestic versus foreign practices and production methods. The most complete and authoritative book on soybeans Features internationally recognized authors in the 21-chapter book Offers sufficient depth to meet the needs of experts in the subject matter, as well as individuals with basic knowledge of the topic

Inanimate Life

Inanimate Life
Author: George M. Briggs
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021-07-16
Genre:
ISBN: 9781942341826

The Soybean Through World History

The Soybean Through World History
Author: Matilda Baraibar Norberg
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2023-06-30
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1000903478

This book examines the changing roles and functions of the soybean throughout world history and discusses how this reflects the complex processes of agrofood globalization. The book uses a historical lens to analyze the processes and features that brought us to the current global configuration of the soybean commodity chain. From its origins as a peasant food in ancient China, today the protein-rich soybean is by far the most cultivated biotech crop on Earth; used to make a huge variety of food and industrial products, including animal feed, tofu, cooking oil, soy sauce, biodiesel and soap. While there is a burgeoning amount of literature on how the contemporary global soy web affects large tracts of our planet’s social-ecological systems, little attention has been given to the questions of how we got here and what alternative roles the soybean has played in the past. This book fills this gap and demonstrates that it is impossible to properly comprehend the contemporary global soybean chain, or the wider agrofood system of which it is a part, without looking at both their long and short historical development. However, a history of the soybean and its changing roles within equally changing agrofood systems is inexorably a history about globalization. Not only does this book map out where soybeans are produced, but also who governs, wields power and accumulates capital in the entire commodity chain from inputs in production to consumption, as well as identifying the institutional context the global commodity chain operates within. The book concludes with a discussion of the main challenges and contradictions of the current soy regime that could trigger its rupture and end. This book is essential reading for students, practitioners and scholars interested in agriculture and food systems, global commodity chains, globalization, environmental history, economic history and social-ecological systems.

Exceptional Soybeans

Exceptional Soybeans
Author: Geneva Montana Leader Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

On the margins of the first and developing worlds, Argentines have made many bids to enter into the small cohort of international power-players with varying degrees of success. This report takes a step back from rumors and suspicions surrounding Argentina to instead draw attention to the economic growth and international political clout gained through state and private industry support of agricultural biotechnology. Perhaps more important than revenue generated through exports of a lucrative crop, this transformative technology, namely in the form of genetically modified (GM) soybeans, has given Argentine political and industry elites the means to establish credibility in the international community. In turn, this has aided the Argentine state in negotiating the contours of its sovereignty on its own terms. GM soybeans have indeed become a stalwart of Argentine economic growth and a means to gain respect from the international community. There is still controversy, however, surrounding regulation of GM soybean production and the uncertain effects on those whose livelihoods depend on its continued adoption. Given that the jury is still out on the long-term effects of agricultural biotechnology production on soil quality, health and human safety, and rural job opportunities, the domestic effect of Argentine exceptionalism deployed for international purposes is troublingly unclear. An exploration of Argentine exceptionalism in relation to a shifting, yet always hybrid political economy and some of the contradictions via two case studies is a first step toward discovering how transitions to agricultural biotechnology affect the lives and livelihoods of Argentines at home.