Genetically Modified Diplomacy


Book Description

When genetically engineered seeds were first deployed in the Americas in the mid-1990s, the biotechnology industry and its partners envisaged a world in which their crops would be widely accepted as the food of the future. Critics, however, raised a variety of social, environmental, economic, and health concerns. This book traces the emergence of the 2000 Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety � and the discourse of precaution toward GEOs that the protocol institutionalized internationally. Peter Andr�e explains this reversal in the "common-sense" understanding of genetic engineering, and discusses the new debates it has engendered.




The International Politics of Genetically Modified Food


Book Description

Genetically modified food is at the heart of a new global conflict over how to govern risky technologies in an era of globalization. This timely collection brings together experts from the fields of IR, environmental studies, trade and law to examine the sources of international friction and to explore the prospects for international co-operation.




Travels in the Genetically Modified Zone


Book Description

With genetically modified crops we have entered uncharted territory--where visions of the triumph of biotechnology in agriculture vie with dire views of medical and environmental disaster. As he seeks a middle ground where concerns about genetic engineering can be rationally discussed and resolved, Winston gives us a full and balanced view of the forces at play in the chaotic debate over agricultural biotechnology.




Agricultural Biotechnology and Transatlantic Trade


Book Description

Genetically modified (GM) agricultural crops which are approved as safe in North America (Canada and the United States) are facing significant regulatory hurdles in gaining access to the European Union. The development and commercialization of GM crops illustrate a complex challenge facing trade diplomacy - the challenge of regulatory regionalism created by social regulatory barriers.




United States Promotion of GM Foods in Mexico


Book Description

The Mexican government’s policy of genetically modified (GM) foods has moved from a precautionary approach to the promotion and commercialization of agricultural biotechnology, possibly at the risk of narrowing Mexico’s biodiversity. The approval of the Law of Biosafety of Genetically Modified Organisms in 2005 allowed the cultivation of GM food crops. Subsequently, in accordance with the North America Free Trade Agreement, Mexico liberalized all agricultural product imports, including GM foods in 2008. In this thesis, I argue that the GM food policy change in Mexico can be explained by studying the US diplomatic and commercial efforts to promote GM foods. How US agencies, biotechnology companies, and NGOs have interacted with Mexican officials and other stakeholders, and how they have influenced this change of GM food policy, will be analyzed at length in this thesis. Through an adaptation of a public diplomacy model, and the conduct of documentary analysis and in-depth interviews, in this thesis I examine the state and non-state actors along with the public diplomacy activities involved in the Mexico’s GM food policy change. I describe how state actors such as the US Department of State and the Department of Agriculture have implemented programs that promote American agricultural products, including GM foods, and have applied diplomatic instruments, which in parallel with biotechnology corporations’ initiatives, appear to have been effective in influencing Mexican policy-makers. Non-state actors such as biotechnology companies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have also played important roles in changing Mexico’s GM food policy. My research found that biotechnology companies, as a result of their greater resources, have been more influential than NGOs, but NGO participation in public diplomacy activities has been relevant in raising GM food awareness among general audiences that in turn influenced policy-makers to exercise caution. Nevertheless, it is hypothesized that while the decision to liberalize GM food imports was a Mexican government decision, Mexican officials and legislators were influenced in that decision by US agencies and biotechnology corporations’ representations. How that influence was initiated, manifested, institutionalized, and received, analyzed by this author through the lens of a public diplomacy model, is the subject of this thesis.







Diplomatic Tradecraft


Book Description

As universities and governments seek to prepare the next generation of diplomats to manage international affairs, they finally have a teaching tool focusing on the practical knowledge and skills that in the past could be learned only on the job. Edited by Nicholas Kralev, founder of the Washington International Diplomatic Academy, Diplomatic Tradecraft brings together 18 career ambassadors with decades of experience to lift the curtain on a mysterious but vital profession, and to pass on the insights and abilities they gained to those who will succeed them. Beginning with an overview of diplomatic institutions and protocols, the text considers the key attributes of diplomatic communication and negotiation, as well as core specializations including economic, consular and public diplomacy. With compelling narratives, case studies and exercise scenarios, the chapters on various aspects of diplomatic practice form a cohesive and comprehensive volume, written in an accessible and engaging style.




Altered Genes, Twisted Truth


Book Description

Offers an exposé on the genetic engineering of foods, maintaining that the unduly reckless way it has been practiced is based, not on sound science, but the subversion of science, and that its promotion has been marked by corruption and the suppression or distortion of facts.




Resistance Is Fertile


Book Description

For decades, government, industry, and the mainstream media have extolled the virtues of biotechnology while downplaying its negative side effects. Focusing on agriculture, Resistance Is Fertile challenges this dominant rhetoric by analyzing the major issues around which opponents of biotechnology in Canada are mobilizing resistance – namely, the enclosure of the biological and the knowledge commons, which together form the BioCommons. What emerges is an empirically and theoretically informed analysis of Canada’s regulatory regime, the corporate control of seeds, and attempts to construct and control public discussions about agricultural biotechnology.




The Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy


Book Description

Including chapters from some of the leading experts in the field this Handbook provides a full overview of the nature and challenges of modern diplomacy and includes a tour d'horizon of the key ways in which the theory and practice of modern diplomacy are evolving in the 21st Century.