The Landgrabbers: The New Fight Over Who Owns The Earth
By (Author) Fred Pearce
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Eden Project Books
3rd June 2013
28th March 2013
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
320.120905
Paperback
448
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 28mm
304g
How City financiers, Chinese billionaires, oil sheikhs and agribusiness are buying up our hungry, crowded world. Brilliant, trail-blazing reportage. What do City speculators, Gulf oil sheikhs, Chinese entrepreneurs, big-name financiers like George Soros and industry titans like Richard Branson buy when they go shopping Land. Parcels the size of Wales are being snapped up across the plains of Africa, the paddy fields of Southeast Asia, the jungles of the Amazon and the prairies of Eastern Europe. Why The money men will tell you that their investments will bring an end to world famine. But is this more about fat profits and food security for the few The race is on to grab the world's most precious and irreplaceable resource. In this brilliant piece of investigative journalism Fred Pearce moves from boardroom and trading floor to goat-herder's hut and flooded forest. The result is an eye-opening, extraordinarily important examination of the most profound ethical and economic issue in the world today.
Brilliant: Fred Pearce has lifted the lid on an issue that has yet to register with most people. Anyone who cares about the fate of the planet should read this. -- Chris Mullen
Fred Pearce is at the nexus, brilliantly reporting on the biggest swindle of the 21st centurey. He is without peer. * Susan George, author of HOW THE OTHER HALF DIES *
compelling and well-researched * Nature *
A very important piece of work. * Tony Benn *
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 *
Fred Pearce is the environmental and development consultant for New Scientist and writes regularly for the Guardian. He has won many awards including UK Environmental Journalist of the Year. In 2011 he received the ABSW Science Writers' Lifetime Achievement Award. His previous books include When the Rivers Run Dry - voted among the all-time 'Top 50' books by Cambridge University's Programme for Sustainable Leadership - The Last Generation, Confessions of an Eco-Sinner - longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize - and Peoplequake.