A Eulogy to Seed Sharing: Manufacturing Genuine Scarcity


Autoria(s): al Attar, Mohsen; Dobbs, Mary
Data(s)

01/10/2015

Resumo

Seeds are traditionally considered as common or even public goods, their traits as ‘products of nature’. They are also essential to biodiversity, food security and food sovereignty. However, a suite of techno-legal interventions has legislated the enclosure of seeds: seed patents, plant variety protections, and stewardship agreements. These instruments create and protect private proprietary interests over plant material and point to the interface between seeds, capitalism, and law. In the following article, we consider the latest innovations, the bulk of which have been directed toward genetically disabling the reproductive capacities of seeds (terminator technology) or tying these capacities to outputs (‘round-up necessary’). In both instances, scarcity moves from artificial to real. <br/>For the agro-industrial complex, the innovations are perfectly rational as they can simultaneously control supply and demand. For those outside the complex, however, the consequences are potentially ruinous. The practices of seed-saving and exchange no longer are feasible, even covertly. Contemporary genetic controls have upped the ante, by either disabling the reproductive capacity of seeds or, through cross-pollination and outcrossing, facilitating the autonomous spread of the genetic modifications that are importantly still traceable, identifiable and therefore capable of legal protection. In both instances, genuine scarcity becomes the new standard as private interests dominate what was a public sphere.<br/>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/a-eulogy-to-seed-sharing-manufacturing-genuine-scarcity(d8b8e0a3-6d07-4454-856e-7e9467514d87).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

al Attar , M & Dobbs , M 2015 , ' A Eulogy to Seed Sharing: Manufacturing Genuine Scarcity ' Paper presented at IVR Annual Conference 2015 , Belfast , United Kingdom , 23/10/2015 - 24/10/2015 , .

Tipo

conferenceObject