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Re-Thinking Agri-culture:
As If the Real World Matters

By Jules Pretty
Centre for the Environment and Society
University of Essex

Monday, October 20, 2003

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What is farming for? Guest commentary


Jules Pretty

Pretty, an internationally known British scholar and director of the Centre for Environment and Society at the University of Essex (UK), is best known for his comprehensive study of more than 200 sustainable farming projects on 70 million acres in 52 countries. His analysis showed that the use of sustainable agriculture practices can lead to substantial increases in production -perhaps as much as 150 percent for some root crops. He has written more than 150 scholarly papers and eight books. The most recent are Agri-Culture: Reconnecting People, Land and Nature and Guide to a Green Planet.

Additional work has embraced such issues as: suggesting a five-point strategy for a national plan for reconstruction of Britain's farm industry; outlining measures to operationalize "sustainability"; identifying point-counterpoint arguments for the benefits and drawbacks of local food systems, and presenting the case for open citizens juries as a means of linking sustainability and deliberative democracy.

Pretty also serves as deputy-chair of Great Britain's Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment (ACRE).

He is a frequent speaker and contributor to media reports, and has worked with the BBC on several nationally-broadcast programs. A member of the Institute of Biology and British Agricultural History Society, he edits the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability.

The seminar was sponsored by the Leopold Center's Ecology Initiative and ISU's Bioethics Program. For more information, contact initiative leader Jeri Neal, (515) 294-3610.


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