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Against the Grain: How Farmers around the Globe Are Transforming Agriculture to Nourish the World and Heal the Planet

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Against the Grain: How Farmers around the Globe Are Transforming Agriculture to Nourish the World and Heal the Planet

Contributors:

By (Author) Roger Thurow

ISBN:

9781572843400

Publisher:

Surrey Books,U.S.

Imprint:

Surrey Books,U.S.

Publication Date:

20th November 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Agronomy and crop production
Organic gardening / Sustainable gardening
Cookery / food and drink / food writing

Dewey:

630.2086

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

244

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 215mm

Description

When famine, drought, and malnutrition plagued their communities, these farmers tried something revolutionaryand managed to nourish their families and their land in the process.

Farmers in some of the worlds oldest agricultural areasAfricas Great Rift Valley, Indias Indo-Gangetic Plain, the Highlands of Central America, and the Great Plains of the U.S.were toiling year after year, only to find that modern industrial agriculture was turning on itself. The very practices that they were using to grow food yesterday were making it more difficult to grow food today. Pesticides used to protect their crops were killing off beneficial biodiversity. Monocropping was depleting the soil of necessary nutrients. And deforestation was making the land hotter and drier. Industrial agricultures effects on our climate and environment weremultiplying and worsening, until the very families growing the worlds food were starving.

But some of these farmers took a gamble and changed their practices to work with nature rather than bending nature to their will. They terraced the land to catch more rainwater and prevent soil runoff; they planted a diverse range of vegetables that would balance the nutrients in the soil; they replaced commercial fertilizers with organic matter from their own farms; they planted more trees and drought-resistant grains; and, perhaps most importantly, they taught their communities by example that these regenerative farming methods paid offboth in nourishing their families and in bringing their land back to life.

Award-winning author and journalist Roger Thurow shares their stories, highlighting the conflicts inherent in our most important human endeavor: feeding the world using the methods of industrial agriculture is stripping the land of its ability to feed future generations. But, as Thurow points out, these farmers are starting a new kind of revolution, nourishing both humans and the land, and following their lead could help us solve one of the great crises of our time.


Author Bio

Roger Thurow is a journalist and author who writes about the persistence of hunger and malnutrition in our world. He was a reporter at the Wall Street Journal for thirty years. He is, with Scott Kilman, the author of Enough: Why the Worlds Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty, which won the Harry Chapin WhyHunger book award, as well as two other books on world hunger. He is a recipient of Action Against Hungers Humanitarian Award. He and his wife Anne live in Auburn, Alabama, where he is a scholar-in-residence at Auburn Universitys Hunger Solutions Institute.

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