New @ ESIN

Upcoming Events

5th Annual International Conference on Sociology
Call for Papers and Participation, Deadline: October 11, 2010
The Forgotten Epidemic HIV/AIDS: Crisis in Black America
Deadline for Abstract Submission: September 8, 2010
2011 American Men's Studies Association Conference: Men, Masculi
Deadline for Submissions: October 31, 2010

ESIN News

Professional Opportunity
Rutgers University School of Social Work, Two Tenure-Track Faculty Positions
Professional Opportunity
University of North Dakota, One-year Visiting Assistant Professor, Counseling Psychology
ESIN Congratulates
Otima Doyle, PhD, MSW
Professional Opportunity
University of Michigan National Center for Institutional Diversity, Postdoctoral Program
Funding Opportunity
Health Promotion Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Males (R01)
Social Work Resource
The Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research presents their new website

Scientific Update

Black patients, women miss out on strongest medications for...
Article highlighting research of Carmen Green
A Meta-Study of Black Male Mental Health and Well-Being
D.C. Watkins, R.L. Walker, and D.M. Griffith

Scientific News

Biofuels, food security, and Africa

Molony, T. and Smith, J.

2010-04-21 09:15:18

Biofuels, food security, and Africa
Molony, T. and Smith, J.
African Affairs, doi:10.1093/afraf/adq019

http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/adq019v1?etoc

GLOBAL BIOFUEL PRODUCTION TRIPLED BETWEEN 2000 and 2007 and is projected to double again by 2011.1 This growth reflects a growing interest worldwide in renewable energy alternatives to fossil fuels, especially as a perceived solution to the transport sector’s dependency on oil. It also reflects the enforcement in 2005 of the Kyoto Protocol, and the increasing implementation of national biofuels targets. As a result of these and other influences, policy makers and researchers in African countries are giving more attention to biofuels. Yet the rising demand for biofuels has sparked a debate over the threat that energy security poses to food security, and within a few short years biofuels have shifted from being seen as a multi-purpose solution to a range of problems – climate change, energy insecurity and underdevelopment – to what the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food has described as a ‘crime against humanity’.2 The threat is particularly profound for the many African countries where food security is a significant issue, and raises questions in what has become known as the ‘food-versus-fuel’ debate. This briefing discusses the relationship between biofuels and food security in Africa, and brings in related issues concerning land ownership and livelihoods. As more and more African countries devote land to the cultivation of biofuels, the numerous questions and potential conflicts that are addressed here are of crucial relevance to many vulnerable populations, environments, and states across the continent.

Back to scientific news

Excellent Scholarship is a Prerequisite for Social Change

:: an ianncomm site ::