06 August, 2012

Agriculture and Food In India: A Half-Century Review, from Independence to Globalization

Agriculture and Food In India: A Half-Century Review, from Independence to Globalization 

By- Bruno Dorin and Frederic Landy  

More than a fifth of the world’s farmers live in India, which has over a billion inhabitants to support and feed. From Independence in 1947 to the lifting of trade barriers in 2001, this book explains how the Indian Union has succeeded in becoming one of the world’s leading food producers, but also why it is still a land of poverty. 

The various aspects of the question are addressed, from the environment (cultural and natural, local and international) to institutions and food products. The ins and outs of the green revolution are obviously discussed, but so are those of other less familiar coloured revolutions (white for dairy, yellow for vegetable oils, blue for agriculture), not forgetting horticultural and poultry dynamics, as well as products that give India its flavour (spices, tea and other plantation crops). Three core issues are debated at the end: the unsolved problem of poverty and under-nutrition, the worrying deterioration of natural resources, and the recent economic liberalization. 

This half-century review, which takes the form of a handbook for a broad readership, enlightens us on both the past and future paths of the world’s biggest democracy.   

Bruno Dorin, Ph.D in economics and postgraduate in agricultural engineering as well as management, is now a CIRAD researcher (Montpellier, France). 

Frederic Landy is a professor of geography at the University of Paris X-Nanterre (GECKO laboratory), a fellow of the Institute Universitaire de France and an associate researcher with the Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud (CNRS-EHESS).    


ISBN  978-81-7304-812-8    2009   280p.   Rs.695/ Pounds 40

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