The Oxford Handbook of Food, Water and Society

Price: 9500.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780190669799

Hardback

944 pages

Price: 9500.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780190669799

Hardback

944 pages

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

  • A scholarly yet accessible look at how society and legislators can put in place a sustainable food system founded on sustainable water ecosystems
  • The articles promote readers' understanding of how the way that they eat can damage the health of themselves and that of the planet, and how to eat and manage water resources sustainably
  • This volume's synthesis of regional and global overviews identifies the policy changes that need to be made to enable farmers to undertake their dual role of feeding a growing population and stewarding natural resources
  • Essential reading for scholars of food systems, food value chains, food and water politics, and agriculture; legislators; members of NGOs, development agencies, and the media; food consumers; and all those who operate in our food system

Rights:  OUP USA (INDIAN TERRITORY)

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

Description

Food, water and society: what is managed by whom, and with what impacts?

Our food supply chains are at risk. Water resources--sometimes scarce, often damaged, and always under-valued--are among the major reasons why food and water security rank high every year in the World Economic Forum's major global risk analysis. A stable and sustainable food system is critical to society's survival. This Handbook shows that keeping the food system stable comes at the expense of the environment, especially of water resources and those who consume and manage them.

The way the food system operates reflects hard political realities. Rather than pay for the environmental costs of sustainable production, society expects food at ever lower prices. Governments reflect their electorates in this regard. Given that farm production may account for as little as 10% of the food value chain in wealthy economies, it is striking that governments have been unwilling (or unable) to put in place the essential laws and accountability that would enable famers to ensure both production and stewardship. Corporate food traders, food manufacturers, and retailers on the other hand operate in markets that make profits and pay taxes. But these corporations are not contractually bound to utilize highly nutritious, sustainably produced food commodities.

The articles in this Oxford Handbook have been written by water and food system scientists and professionals, including farmers, rarely heard voices who understand the problems of food producers, food manufacturers, and regulating markets and public policy. The articles address the blind spots of society and its public policymakers, demonstrating the importance of informing society about the consequences of its food preferences and the heroic challenges it is beginning to face. The damage we are doing to our water and soil ecosystems is as important as the damage we do to the atmosphere. Impressed by the technical and organizational advances of the past two centuries, the contributors featured in this book also take note of where economic inefficiencies and cultural deadlock in a 4,000 year old system are putting our critical food supply chains at risk.

About the Editor

Tony Allan, PhD is based at King's College London and SOAS London. He specializes in the analysis of water resources in semi-arid regions and on the role of global systems in ameliorating local and regional water deficits. He pointed out that water short economies achieve water and food security not on the basis of their own water endowments but by importing water intensive food commodities - a concept which he found he had to call "virtual water." For the past decade he has analyzed our very politicized food system, highlighting that how the "broken" food system operates determines how water is managed and mismanaged by farmers.

Brendan Bromwich is an environmental engineer with experience of water problems in complex social and political contexts. He has worked in the private sector, NGOs and the UN in Europe, Asia, and Africa with a focus on water infrastructure and on institutional change. His PhD thesis examines institutional change and conflict over natural resources and is based on his experience coordinating UN Environment's work in Sudan. He holds degrees in Environmental Engineering from Imperial College and in Geography from King's College London.

Martin Keulertz, PhD works as Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences at the American University of Beirut, where he chairs AUB's Food Security Program. He previously worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at Purdue University (USA) and Humboldt University Berlin (Germany). He obtained his PhD at King's College London (UK) in 2013, his MSc in Middle East Politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) and a BA in Political and Social Sciences at the University of Wales, Bangor in 2007. Martin's research interests center around the water-food-energy nexus with a particular focus on the Arab world, North America, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, he has published on the global political economy of water and food.

Anthony Colman, PhD is Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Cape Town, University of East Anglia and the Columbia Water Center. His current work is on the UNFCCC Koronivia agenda to reduce GHG emissions and ensure the adaptation of agriculture. He is completing a trilogy study of Cape Town, New York City, and London's planning for drinking water. He was the UK MP for Putney from 1997 to 2005. He is a member of the World Future Council. His work brings together the disciplines of academia, political realism, and the private sector.

Contributors:

Matthew Agarwala, Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Ghada Ahmed, Center on Global Value Chains, Duke University
Tony Allan, Global Studies, King's College London
Amjad Assi, Biological & Agricultural Engineering Department, Texas A&M University
Jyoti Banerjee, Fronesys
Tony Beck, Independent Scholar
M. Bruce Beck, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London; International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Camille Bellet, Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool
Mustapha Besbes, National Engineering School of Tunis, University of Tunis El Manar
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Nestle
Michael Brock, Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Brendan Bromwich, The Food Water Group, King's College London
Mieghan Bruce, School of Veterinary and Life Sciences, Murdoch University
Joanne Burke , Physical Sciences, University of NH
Jamel Chahed, National Engineering School of Tunis, University of Tunis; El Manar
Arthur Chapman, Institute for Futures Research, University of Stellenbosch
Bruno Cheviron, Environment and Agriculture, National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture
Floriane Clement, French National Institute for Agricultural Research
Nikolaus J. Clemenz, Physical Sciences, Mott MacDonald
David Coates, Independent Scholar, United Kingdom
Anthony Colman, Columbia Water Center, Earth Institute, Columbia University
David Leslie Dent, Physical Sciences, UEA
Azza Dirar, School of International Development, University of East Anglia
Frances C. Elwell, Physical Sciences, Mott MacDonald
Vanessa Lucena Empinotti, Rural Planning and Politics, Federal University of ABC (UFABC)
Dieter Gerten, Potsdam Institute for Climate Change Research
Michael Gilmont, University of Oxford
Biksham Gujja, CEO Agri Sri
Dipak Gyawali, Independent Scholar
Abdelkader Hamdane, National Agronomic Institute of Tunis, University of Carthage
Carl Hausmann, Bioversity International
Arjen Hoekstra, Twente University
James Horne, College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University
Jonas Jägermeyr, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Peter Johnston, Environmental and Geographical Science, University of Cape Town
Ulla Kask, Agriculture and Commodities, World Trade Organization
Amir Kassam, Agriculture, University of Reading
Martin Keulertz, Agricultural and Food Sciences, American University of Beirut
Phillipe Le Grusse, CIHEAM-IAMM, University Montpellier
Ryan Lee, University of Arizona
America Lutz Ley, University of Arizona
James Lowenberg-DeBoer, Agriculture, Purdue University
Jay Lund, UC Davis
Nathanial Matthews, King's College London
Rabi Mohtar, Biological & Agricultural Engineering Department, Texas A&M University
Alexis J. Morgan, WWF International, Gland, Switzerland
Roger Moussa, French National Institute for Agricultural Research
Denis Murphy, South Wales University
Alan Nicol, IWMI
Nicola J. Nineham, Mott MacDonald
Emily Nink, Independent Scholar
Stuart Orr, WWF International, Gland, Switzerland
Yulia Peralta, University of Arizona
Chris Perry, former World Bank
Michel Petit, International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium
Anthony J. Reynolds, Reynolds Farm
Phil Riddell, International Water Association
Jonathan Rushton, Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool
John Schluter, Cafe Africa
Gus Schumacher, Independent Scholar
Christopher Scott, University of Arizona
Laurence Smith, SOAS University of London
Garrison Sposito, Berkeley University
Daniel A. Sumner, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Davis
Michael Thompson, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, University of Oxford
Samuel Vionnet, Valuing Nature
Christian A. Vousvouras, Nestle
Tim Williams, IWMI Director, Africa
Eckart Woertz, Barcelona Centre for International Affairs (CIDOB)
Rami Zurayk, Landscape Design and Ecosystem Management, American University of Beirut

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

Table of contents

Contents
List of Contributors
Introduction
1. Food, Water and Society: An Analytical Framework
Brendan Bromwich, Tony Allan, Anthony Colman, Martin Keulertz
Part I: Key Concepts
2. Green Water Used By Plants And Managed By Farmers: Measurement, Accounting, Policy
David Leslie Dent
3. Green Water and Food Security
Garrison Sposito
4. Natural Capital Accounting for Water Resources
Matthew Agarwala, Michael Brock
5. Will Irrigation Technology, Pricing, or Quotas Ensure Sustainable Water Use?
Chris Perry
6. Global food Trade and Local Water Resources: Can We Bridge the Regulatory Gap?
Arjen Hoekstra
7. Water Service Requirements for Agriculture: Nature, Nurture and Negotiation
Carl Hausmann
8. Valuing Water in Supply Chains
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Christian A. Vousvouras, Samuel Vionnet
9. Valuing Water in Food Systems and Beyond
Alexis J. Morgan, Stuart Orr, Nathanial Matthews
10. Subsidies and the Environment: Impacts of WTO Agricultural Support Disciplines
Ulla Kask
11. Dietary Patterns that Value People and the Planet
Joanne Burke
12. Incentive Programs to Address the Challenges of Hunger, Undernutrition, and Obesity in the United States
Gus Schumacher, Emily Nink
13. Farmer-led Water User Associations in Agricultural Water Management
Rami Zurayk, Azza Dirar
14. Gender, Poverty and Politics Along the Real-virtual Water Spectrum
Floriane Clement, Alan Nicol
15. The Feminization of Agriculture: Evidence and Implications for Food and Water Security
Vanya Slavchevska, Susan Kaaria, Sanna Liisa Taivalmaa
16. Societal Drivers of Food and Water Systems 1: Material Flows, Household Consumption Styles, and Contending Schools of Engineering Thought
Michael Thompson, M. Bruce Beck, Dipak Gyawali
17. Societal Drivers of Food and Water Systems 2: Applying Plural Rationality to some Wicked Problems
M. Bruce Beck, Dipak Gyawali, Michael Thompson
Part II: Global Problemsheds
18. Water and Food in the American West: Lessons from Recent Droughts in California
Josué Medellín-Azuara, Jay Lund, Daniel A. Sumner
19. Food and Water Security in North America's Transboundary Sonoran Desert: a Water Exporting Dryland
America Lutz Ley, Ryan Lee, Yulia Peralta, Christopher Scott
20. Water Issues and the Brazilian Agricultural Agenda
Vanessa Lucena Empinotti
21. Water in Australian Agriculture
James Horne
22. Circumventing Water Scarcity in the Jordan Basin: Decoupling Trends in Israel and Jordan
Michael Gilmont, Lara Nassar, Erica Harper, Nadav Tal, Steve Rayner
23. Food and Water Management in Northwest Africa
Mustapha Besbes, Jamel Chahed, Abdelkader Hamdane
24. Food and Water Management in the Mediterranean Basin
Michel Petit, Phillipe Le Grusse
25. Food and Water Security in West Africa
Tim Williams
26. Food and Water Management in Southern Africa
Peter Johnston, Arthur Chapman
27. Food and Water Security in West Asia
Eckart Woertz
28. Understanding Pesticides in England and Wales: Pathways, Policies, and Pollution Prevention
Frances C. Elwell, Nikolaus J. Clemenz, Nicola J. Nineham
29. Cape Town's Contested Hierarchy of Demand for Agricultural and Municipal Water in a Rainfed Economy 2017-18
Anthony Colman
Part III: Key Supply Chains
30. Global Wheat Value Chains
Ghada Ahmed
31. Water for Coffee
John Schluter
32. Water and Rice Production: Looking to the Future
Phil Riddell, Biksham Gujja
33. Oil Palm Value Chain Management
Denis Murphy
34. Successes and Problems with Measuring Water Consumption in Beef Systems
Mieghan Bruce, Camille Bellet, Jonathan Rushton
Part IV: Responding to the Challenge
35. The Potential Impact of Improved Water Management to Alleviate Water Scarcity and Hunger: A Global Perspective
Dieter Gerten, Jonas Jägermeyr
36. The Global Uptake of Conservation Agriculture and the Impact on Water-related Ecosystem Services
Amir Kassam, David Coates
37. A Farmer's Experience of Conservation Agriculture in the UK
Anthony J. Reynolds
38. The Variable Rate Irrigation Management Challenge
James Lowenberg-DeBoer
39. The Water Infrastructure Crisis
Phil Riddell
40. Integrating Multi-Capital Thinking into Business Decisions
Jyoti Banerjee
41. Modelling Agricultural Controls for Flooding and Soil Erosion
Roger Moussa, Bruno Cheviron
42. Water Management by Farmers
Laurence Smith
43. The Role of New and Green Water Resources in Localizing Water and Food Security Under Arid and Semi-Arid Conditions
Rabi Mohtar, Amjad Assi
44. Disruptive Food Supply Chains: Bringing it all Back Home
Tony Beck
45. Lab-grown Meat: Can It Change the World?
Martin Keulertz
Conclusions
46. Food, Water and the Consequences of Society not Valuing the Environment
Tony Allan

Index

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

Edited by Tony Allan, Brendan Bromwich, Martin Keulertz & and Anthony Colman

Description

Food, water and society: what is managed by whom, and with what impacts?

Our food supply chains are at risk. Water resources--sometimes scarce, often damaged, and always under-valued--are among the major reasons why food and water security rank high every year in the World Economic Forum's major global risk analysis. A stable and sustainable food system is critical to society's survival. This Handbook shows that keeping the food system stable comes at the expense of the environment, especially of water resources and those who consume and manage them.

The way the food system operates reflects hard political realities. Rather than pay for the environmental costs of sustainable production, society expects food at ever lower prices. Governments reflect their electorates in this regard. Given that farm production may account for as little as 10% of the food value chain in wealthy economies, it is striking that governments have been unwilling (or unable) to put in place the essential laws and accountability that would enable famers to ensure both production and stewardship. Corporate food traders, food manufacturers, and retailers on the other hand operate in markets that make profits and pay taxes. But these corporations are not contractually bound to utilize highly nutritious, sustainably produced food commodities.

The articles in this Oxford Handbook have been written by water and food system scientists and professionals, including farmers, rarely heard voices who understand the problems of food producers, food manufacturers, and regulating markets and public policy. The articles address the blind spots of society and its public policymakers, demonstrating the importance of informing society about the consequences of its food preferences and the heroic challenges it is beginning to face. The damage we are doing to our water and soil ecosystems is as important as the damage we do to the atmosphere. Impressed by the technical and organizational advances of the past two centuries, the contributors featured in this book also take note of where economic inefficiencies and cultural deadlock in a 4,000 year old system are putting our critical food supply chains at risk.

About the Editor

Tony Allan, PhD is based at King's College London and SOAS London. He specializes in the analysis of water resources in semi-arid regions and on the role of global systems in ameliorating local and regional water deficits. He pointed out that water short economies achieve water and food security not on the basis of their own water endowments but by importing water intensive food commodities - a concept which he found he had to call "virtual water." For the past decade he has analyzed our very politicized food system, highlighting that how the "broken" food system operates determines how water is managed and mismanaged by farmers.

Brendan Bromwich is an environmental engineer with experience of water problems in complex social and political contexts. He has worked in the private sector, NGOs and the UN in Europe, Asia, and Africa with a focus on water infrastructure and on institutional change. His PhD thesis examines institutional change and conflict over natural resources and is based on his experience coordinating UN Environment's work in Sudan. He holds degrees in Environmental Engineering from Imperial College and in Geography from King's College London.

Martin Keulertz, PhD works as Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences at the American University of Beirut, where he chairs AUB's Food Security Program. He previously worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at Purdue University (USA) and Humboldt University Berlin (Germany). He obtained his PhD at King's College London (UK) in 2013, his MSc in Middle East Politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) and a BA in Political and Social Sciences at the University of Wales, Bangor in 2007. Martin's research interests center around the water-food-energy nexus with a particular focus on the Arab world, North America, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, he has published on the global political economy of water and food.

Anthony Colman, PhD is Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Cape Town, University of East Anglia and the Columbia Water Center. His current work is on the UNFCCC Koronivia agenda to reduce GHG emissions and ensure the adaptation of agriculture. He is completing a trilogy study of Cape Town, New York City, and London's planning for drinking water. He was the UK MP for Putney from 1997 to 2005. He is a member of the World Future Council. His work brings together the disciplines of academia, political realism, and the private sector.

Contributors:

Matthew Agarwala, Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Ghada Ahmed, Center on Global Value Chains, Duke University
Tony Allan, Global Studies, King's College London
Amjad Assi, Biological & Agricultural Engineering Department, Texas A&M University
Jyoti Banerjee, Fronesys
Tony Beck, Independent Scholar
M. Bruce Beck, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London; International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Camille Bellet, Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool
Mustapha Besbes, National Engineering School of Tunis, University of Tunis El Manar
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Nestle
Michael Brock, Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Brendan Bromwich, The Food Water Group, King's College London
Mieghan Bruce, School of Veterinary and Life Sciences, Murdoch University
Joanne Burke , Physical Sciences, University of NH
Jamel Chahed, National Engineering School of Tunis, University of Tunis; El Manar
Arthur Chapman, Institute for Futures Research, University of Stellenbosch
Bruno Cheviron, Environment and Agriculture, National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture
Floriane Clement, French National Institute for Agricultural Research
Nikolaus J. Clemenz, Physical Sciences, Mott MacDonald
David Coates, Independent Scholar, United Kingdom
Anthony Colman, Columbia Water Center, Earth Institute, Columbia University
David Leslie Dent, Physical Sciences, UEA
Azza Dirar, School of International Development, University of East Anglia
Frances C. Elwell, Physical Sciences, Mott MacDonald
Vanessa Lucena Empinotti, Rural Planning and Politics, Federal University of ABC (UFABC)
Dieter Gerten, Potsdam Institute for Climate Change Research
Michael Gilmont, University of Oxford
Biksham Gujja, CEO Agri Sri
Dipak Gyawali, Independent Scholar
Abdelkader Hamdane, National Agronomic Institute of Tunis, University of Carthage
Carl Hausmann, Bioversity International
Arjen Hoekstra, Twente University
James Horne, College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University
Jonas Jägermeyr, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Peter Johnston, Environmental and Geographical Science, University of Cape Town
Ulla Kask, Agriculture and Commodities, World Trade Organization
Amir Kassam, Agriculture, University of Reading
Martin Keulertz, Agricultural and Food Sciences, American University of Beirut
Phillipe Le Grusse, CIHEAM-IAMM, University Montpellier
Ryan Lee, University of Arizona
America Lutz Ley, University of Arizona
James Lowenberg-DeBoer, Agriculture, Purdue University
Jay Lund, UC Davis
Nathanial Matthews, King's College London
Rabi Mohtar, Biological & Agricultural Engineering Department, Texas A&M University
Alexis J. Morgan, WWF International, Gland, Switzerland
Roger Moussa, French National Institute for Agricultural Research
Denis Murphy, South Wales University
Alan Nicol, IWMI
Nicola J. Nineham, Mott MacDonald
Emily Nink, Independent Scholar
Stuart Orr, WWF International, Gland, Switzerland
Yulia Peralta, University of Arizona
Chris Perry, former World Bank
Michel Petit, International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium
Anthony J. Reynolds, Reynolds Farm
Phil Riddell, International Water Association
Jonathan Rushton, Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool
John Schluter, Cafe Africa
Gus Schumacher, Independent Scholar
Christopher Scott, University of Arizona
Laurence Smith, SOAS University of London
Garrison Sposito, Berkeley University
Daniel A. Sumner, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Davis
Michael Thompson, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, University of Oxford
Samuel Vionnet, Valuing Nature
Christian A. Vousvouras, Nestle
Tim Williams, IWMI Director, Africa
Eckart Woertz, Barcelona Centre for International Affairs (CIDOB)
Rami Zurayk, Landscape Design and Ecosystem Management, American University of Beirut

Read More

Table of contents

Contents
List of Contributors
Introduction
1. Food, Water and Society: An Analytical Framework
Brendan Bromwich, Tony Allan, Anthony Colman, Martin Keulertz
Part I: Key Concepts
2. Green Water Used By Plants And Managed By Farmers: Measurement, Accounting, Policy
David Leslie Dent
3. Green Water and Food Security
Garrison Sposito
4. Natural Capital Accounting for Water Resources
Matthew Agarwala, Michael Brock
5. Will Irrigation Technology, Pricing, or Quotas Ensure Sustainable Water Use?
Chris Perry
6. Global food Trade and Local Water Resources: Can We Bridge the Regulatory Gap?
Arjen Hoekstra
7. Water Service Requirements for Agriculture: Nature, Nurture and Negotiation
Carl Hausmann
8. Valuing Water in Supply Chains
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Christian A. Vousvouras, Samuel Vionnet
9. Valuing Water in Food Systems and Beyond
Alexis J. Morgan, Stuart Orr, Nathanial Matthews
10. Subsidies and the Environment: Impacts of WTO Agricultural Support Disciplines
Ulla Kask
11. Dietary Patterns that Value People and the Planet
Joanne Burke
12. Incentive Programs to Address the Challenges of Hunger, Undernutrition, and Obesity in the United States
Gus Schumacher, Emily Nink
13. Farmer-led Water User Associations in Agricultural Water Management
Rami Zurayk, Azza Dirar
14. Gender, Poverty and Politics Along the Real-virtual Water Spectrum
Floriane Clement, Alan Nicol
15. The Feminization of Agriculture: Evidence and Implications for Food and Water Security
Vanya Slavchevska, Susan Kaaria, Sanna Liisa Taivalmaa
16. Societal Drivers of Food and Water Systems 1: Material Flows, Household Consumption Styles, and Contending Schools of Engineering Thought
Michael Thompson, M. Bruce Beck, Dipak Gyawali
17. Societal Drivers of Food and Water Systems 2: Applying Plural Rationality to some Wicked Problems
M. Bruce Beck, Dipak Gyawali, Michael Thompson
Part II: Global Problemsheds
18. Water and Food in the American West: Lessons from Recent Droughts in California
Josué Medellín-Azuara, Jay Lund, Daniel A. Sumner
19. Food and Water Security in North America's Transboundary Sonoran Desert: a Water Exporting Dryland
America Lutz Ley, Ryan Lee, Yulia Peralta, Christopher Scott
20. Water Issues and the Brazilian Agricultural Agenda
Vanessa Lucena Empinotti
21. Water in Australian Agriculture
James Horne
22. Circumventing Water Scarcity in the Jordan Basin: Decoupling Trends in Israel and Jordan
Michael Gilmont, Lara Nassar, Erica Harper, Nadav Tal, Steve Rayner
23. Food and Water Management in Northwest Africa
Mustapha Besbes, Jamel Chahed, Abdelkader Hamdane
24. Food and Water Management in the Mediterranean Basin
Michel Petit, Phillipe Le Grusse
25. Food and Water Security in West Africa
Tim Williams
26. Food and Water Management in Southern Africa
Peter Johnston, Arthur Chapman
27. Food and Water Security in West Asia
Eckart Woertz
28. Understanding Pesticides in England and Wales: Pathways, Policies, and Pollution Prevention
Frances C. Elwell, Nikolaus J. Clemenz, Nicola J. Nineham
29. Cape Town's Contested Hierarchy of Demand for Agricultural and Municipal Water in a Rainfed Economy 2017-18
Anthony Colman
Part III: Key Supply Chains
30. Global Wheat Value Chains
Ghada Ahmed
31. Water for Coffee
John Schluter
32. Water and Rice Production: Looking to the Future
Phil Riddell, Biksham Gujja
33. Oil Palm Value Chain Management
Denis Murphy
34. Successes and Problems with Measuring Water Consumption in Beef Systems
Mieghan Bruce, Camille Bellet, Jonathan Rushton
Part IV: Responding to the Challenge
35. The Potential Impact of Improved Water Management to Alleviate Water Scarcity and Hunger: A Global Perspective
Dieter Gerten, Jonas Jägermeyr
36. The Global Uptake of Conservation Agriculture and the Impact on Water-related Ecosystem Services
Amir Kassam, David Coates
37. A Farmer's Experience of Conservation Agriculture in the UK
Anthony J. Reynolds
38. The Variable Rate Irrigation Management Challenge
James Lowenberg-DeBoer
39. The Water Infrastructure Crisis
Phil Riddell
40. Integrating Multi-Capital Thinking into Business Decisions
Jyoti Banerjee
41. Modelling Agricultural Controls for Flooding and Soil Erosion
Roger Moussa, Bruno Cheviron
42. Water Management by Farmers
Laurence Smith
43. The Role of New and Green Water Resources in Localizing Water and Food Security Under Arid and Semi-Arid Conditions
Rabi Mohtar, Amjad Assi
44. Disruptive Food Supply Chains: Bringing it all Back Home
Tony Beck
45. Lab-grown Meat: Can It Change the World?
Martin Keulertz
Conclusions
46. Food, Water and the Consequences of Society not Valuing the Environment
Tony Allan

Index

Read More