Agriculture

Green Revolutions: Humanitarian efforts or ‘Philanthro-capitalism’? 

Rethinking discourse and narratives around global food inequality 

The success of the first green revolution did not come without an environmental and socioeconomic cost, and the key agendas, which drove the initial revolution alongside its shortcomings, are often overlooked. With the first movement regarded by most as a cultural, technological, and economic triumph, the Rockefeller Foundation has joined forces with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to launch a second green revolution in Africa, also known as AGRA [Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa] (Holt-Giménez et al., 2006). However, this should proceed with caution, and we as a collective should begin to reassess the narrative and discourse around agricultural and geopolitical endeavours such as this one.

Green revolutions and other supposedly philanthropic projects are upheld by the particular rhetoric that: We do not have enough food for everyone. Technology is needed to increase crop production. This will reduce global hunger. 

This simple route of thought is seemingly benign, yet it perpetuates the myth that hunger is a food scarcity issue, therefore failing to address malnutrition as the political and distributional issue that it truly is (Lappé and Collins, 2015). These myths are not only pervasive and rooted in out-dated neo-Malthusian theory, but they also promote technological intervention, increased globalization, and the input of TNCs [transnational corporations] as the solution. This keeps us from questioning whether ‘non for profit’ endeavours such as a second green revolution (or even international food aid) are truly philanthropic, or perhaps just another vessel for capitalist aspiration. Furthermore, our willingness to depend on technology as a benevolent force to our environmental and humanitarian problems could be symptomatic of our inability to face inconvenience, and our apathy towards political and distributional issues, as we fail in opting towards tougher solutions and wait for technological revolution to save us all.   

What actually was the First Green Revolution? 

The green revolution was an agricultural project led by private funders from the 1940s to 1970s put forth as a development strategy to alleviate global hunger and food insecurity (Lappé et al., 1998). Promoted as a solution to insufficient food production and the inability of poverty-stricken countries to enter the global market, the movement proved a success, boosting agricultural output by about 2.5 fold, advancing crop-breeding genetics, and saving millions of lives (Lavelle et al., 2014).  

Hidden Agendas?

Driven by ideas of ‘western' modernity, the goal was for industrial agriculture to proliferate globally, and enable ‘third world’ development. However, many speculate the notion of the first green revolution was actually to aid third world development and bring stability to developing nations vulnerable to communist insurgency amidst a world that was becoming increasingly dominated by the Cold War. This would not only increase globalization, lower prices, and open up US markets but furthermore would combat the fomentation of communism, serving a geopolitical objective. This motivation was said to be vital in the Ford foundations decision to fund the green revolution (Greenfield and Keller, 2004; Dowie, 2001) .  


Final Thoughts

 The initial green revolution succeeded in transforming many third-world nations from food deficit to food surplus. Though the first green revolution was effective for its time, conditions today are vastly different from what they were 60 years ago. Amidst a rapidly deteriorating environmental landscape, it is no longer sustainable nor necessary to further intensify agricultural production. Today the world produces enough food to feed 10 billion people – global food supplies could be characterized as abundant. Yet, institutions continue to circumvent meaningful political change, perpetuating and benefiting off pervasive hunger-scarcity rhetoric to promote industrial and technological growth. This calls into question whether endeavors such as AGRA and other humanitarian-led projects (even food aid) are truly philanthropic or are perhaps just “philanthro-capitalist.” The increased productivity and intensification of food production proposed by AGRA serves futile in alleviating global hunger if the poor can't afford to buy existing food supplies   

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