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Home >  Research Areas >  National Research Initiative >  Books >  Let Them Eat Precaution
Let Them Eat Precaution
Print Mail
How Politics Is Undermining the Genetic Revolution in Agriculture
By Jay Byrne, Gregory Conko, Jon Entine, Tony Gilland, Thomas Jefferson Hoban, Patrick Moore, Andrew S. Natsios, Martina Newell-McGloughlin, Robert L. Paarlberg, C. S. Prakash, Carol Tucker Foreman
Edited by Jon Entine
Posted: Monday, December 12, 2005
National Research Initiative
Dimensions: 6'' x 9''
212 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: January 2006
Hardcover
ISBN: 0844742007
Price: $ 25.00
Add to Cart  
Examination Copies

View the table of contents, introduction, postscript, information about the authors, and the press release/summary.

 

The genetic revolution has offered more promise than substance, except in agriculture, where it has brought profound benefits to farmers and consumers for more than a decade. More nutritious food is now produced with less environmental costs because genetically modified crops require almost no pesticides. Vitamin-enhanced crops and foods are helping to reduce malnutrition in parts of the developing world, and a wave of biopharmaceuticals is being developed. Yet, for all its achievements and promise, agricultural biotechnology is under intense fire from advocacy groups warning of “Frankenfoods” and fanning fear of a “corporate takeover” of agriculture by biotech firms. Mired in a rancorous trade and cultural war between Europe and the United States and inflamed by a politicized media, this technology remains dramatically underutilized, with particularly tragic consequences for millions of starving people in Africa and other poverty-stricken regions.

 

In Let Them Eat Precaution, authors from the United States and the United Kingdom deconstruct these controversies and offer solutions to the current impasse. They address both the risks and rewards of genetic modification; the differing paths that debate over genetic manipulation has followed in Europe and the developing world, in contrast to the United States; the debate’s impact on the commercial realities of companies’ developing new products; and ways to foster more constructive discussion of the costs and benefits of genetic modification to bring about more rational and internationally coordinated public policy.

 

The authors argue that an effective communications strategy focused on the current and potential benefits that these technologies provide is critical if we hope to exploit fully these technological advances. Proponents of biotechnology must accept the fact that sound science is only one criterion for public policymaking and speak to the broader set of concerns—political, social, moral, and economic—that this debate engenders.

 

Praise for Let Them Eat Precaution

Let Them Eat Precaution does a superb job of educating the reading public on the basic issues of genetically modified foods. The distinguished authors provide a devastating point-by-point refutation of the anti-GMO activists’ false claims, providing a reasoned, scientifically grounded perspective on this critical issue. As the Marie Antoinette title implies, though the affluent may be leading the charge against GMO foods, it is the poor who are most likely to suffer the effects of activists that falsely claim to speak for the world’s poor.”

 

Thomas DeGregori, professor of economics, University of Houston,

and author of Origins of the Organic Agriculture Debate

  

“A well-funded global antibiotech activist campaign, abetted by European Union regulators more interested in political pandering than good science, threatens to starve millions of the world’s poorest people by denying them access to environmentally safer and higher yielding biotech crops. The distinguished experts assembled in Let Them Eat Precaution make it abundantly clear that humanity’s health and well-being depend on innovation, not a technological freeze in the name of the “precautionary principle,” which demands perfect safety from all new technologies. The contributors carefully document not only the policy challenges facing agricultural biotechnology but the real benefits—from a massive reduction in pesticide use to a slew of new pharmaceuticals and vitamin-enriched foods—that may never come to fruition if antiscience advocacy groups prevail in this battle of ideas.”

 

Ronald Bailey, author of Liberation Biology: The Scientific and Moral Case

for the Biotech Revolution and science correspondent for Reason magazine

 

 “This fine volume fills a very useful role in the ongoing debate over the use of biotechnology in foods and pharmaceuticals. Let Them Eat Precaution covers every aspect of the issue, catalogs what is known about GM crops, and helps us understand the ideological basis for opposition to the use of this life-saving technology. The antibiotechnology campaigns are denying food to starving millions—a high price to pay for ideology.”

 

Peter Raven, director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Mo.

 



Table of Contents

Editor's Note

Introduction: Beyond Precaution, Jon Entine
      Agricultural Biotechnology on Hold
      The Alice-in-Wonderland World of the "Precautionary Principle"
      Enviromanticism
      References

Part I. Ideological Gridlock

1  Global Views on Agricultural Biotechnology, Thomas Jefferson Hoban
      Leaders' Views on Biotechnology: Results of a Survey
      Conclusion
      Reference

2  Agricultural Biotechnology Caught in a War of Giants, C. S. Prakash and Gregory
          Conko
     
The Challenge of Food Security in Developing Countries
      Modern Biotechnology Joins Crop Development
      Biotechnology Has Begun to Affect the Developing World
      Improved Health through Better Nutrition
      High Anxiety--Public Unease over Bioengineered Crops?
      Do Bioengineered Crops Harm the Environment?
      Unnecessary Speed Bumps and Roadblocks
      The Road Ahead: Toward Improved Food Security for All
      References

3  Trade War or Culture War? The GM Debate in Britain and the European Union, 
          Tony Gilland
     
Europe and the Precautionary Principle
      The British Experience
      Food Scares and the Significance of the BSE and CJD Episdoe
      The UK Government's Response to GM Fears
      European Regulation and Labeling Requirements
      The Price of the Precautionary Principle
      Note
      References

Part II. Consequences

4  Hunger, Famine, and the Promise of Biotechnology, Andrew S. Natsios
      The Debate over Biotechnology
      Placing Biotechnologoy Concerns into Context
      References

5  Let Them Eat Precaution: Why GM Crops Are Being Overregulated in the
    Developing World,
Robert L. Paarlberg
     
Reasons for the Restricted Planting of GM Crops
      Trying to Make a Case against the Regulations
      Who Will Lose If the EU Wins?
      Options for the United States
      Notes
      References

6  Can Public Support for the Use of Biotechnology in Food Be Salvaged? Carol
          Tucker Foreman
     
Food and Feelings
      Current Public Views of Biotechnology
      Why the Skepticism about GM Foods?
      New Generation of Products May Exacerbate Consumer Discomfort
      The Current Regulatory System Undermines Support for Food Biotechnology
      Practical Steps to Improve Prospects for Public Acceptance of Food Biotechnology
      Notes
      References

Part III. Solutions

7  Deconstructing the Agricultural Biotechnology Protest Industry, Jay Byrne
      Money
      Marketing
      The Internet
      Charting a Course for Change
      Notes
      References

8  "Functional Foods" and Biopharmaceuticals: The Next Generation of the GM Revolution,
            
Martina Newell-McGloughlin
     
Functional Foods
      Plant Molecular Farming
      References

9  Challenging the Misinformation of Antibiotechnology Environmentalists, Patrick   
          
Moore
     
Campaign of Fear and Fantasy
      GM Crop Technology vs. Greenpeace in the Developing World
      Breaking Greenpeace's Grip on the Media
      References

Postscript

About the Authors

Index

Related Links
Related Event: "Panic Attack: The New Precautionary Culture, the Politics of Fear, and the Risks to Innovation"


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