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Agricultural Biotechnology in Developing Countries: Towards Optimizing the Benefits for the Poor
Edited by Matin Qaim, Anatole F. Krattiger and Joachim von Braun
Springer
2000
Hardbound 448 pp ISBN 0792372301
£127.00
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Note: Please add 2 to 3 weeks to standard shipping times
Biotechnology offers great potential to contribute to sustainable agricultural growth, food
security and poverty alleviation in developing countries. Yet there are economic and
institutional constraints at national and international levels that inhibit the poor people's
access to appropriate biotechnological innovations. Agricultural Biotechnology in Developing
Countries: Towards Optimizing the Benefits for the Poor addresses the major constraints.
Twenty-three chapters, written by a wide range of scholars and stake-holders, provide an
up-to-date analysis of agricultural biotechnology developments in Latin America, Africa and
Asia. Besides the expected economic and social impacts, the challenges for an adjustment of
the international research structure are discussed, with a special focus on intellectual property
rights and the roles of the main research organizations. Harnessing the comparative advantages
of the public and private sectors through innovative partnerships is the only way forward to
optimize the benefits of biotechnology for the poor. The book will be an invaluable resource
for both academics and policy-makers concerned with agricultural biotechnology in context
of developing-countries.
To find similar publications, click on a keyword below:
Springer
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