Posts tagged farmers

A small, but important note from the UN Dispatch

From Alanna Shaikh at the UN Dispatch:

The poorest billion people on the planet contribute only 3% of the global carbon footprint. Those same billion people will also bear the brunt of climate change. Those people tend to be farmers, and they tend to be women.

The UN Population Fund has issued a new state of the world’s population report about the impact of global climate change on women, stating that “Drought and erratic rainfall force women to work harder to secure food, water and energy for their homes…Girls drop out of school to help their mothers with these tasks. This cycle of deprivation, poverty and inequality undermines the social capital needed to deal effectively with climate change.”

In response to the stunning inequality of the impact of climate change, UNFPA calls for measures to improves the lives of women and mitigate the impact of climate change. That includes supporting education for women and girls, expanding access to reproductive health services, and doing better research on gender and population dynamics in climate change. It’s small stuff compared to the magnitude of the problem of climate change. Better, though, than nothing.


Vandana Shiva on Farmer Suicides, the U.S.-India Nuclear Deal, Wal-Mart in India and More

More coverage of Dr. Vandana Shiva by Democracy Now! Vandana Shiva on Farmer Suicides, the U.S.-India Nuclear Deal, Wal-Mart in India and More Shared via AddThis

Influenza Influences More Than Just the Sick


(image from www.latimes.com)

(image from www.latimes.com)

Over 100 people have died and many more are sick in Mexico from swine flu, with significantly less cases reported in Canada and the U.S. The devastating effects of this illness, however, reach far beyond the people who have been affected and their families.

While the World Health Organization decides on whether to send out a pandemic alert, over 1000 Mexicans remain uncertain as to whether they’ll be able to return to Canada to work as seasonal farm workers. This article in the Globe and Mail expresses also the concern of Canadian farmers, who are wondering if they’ll be receiving the help from Mexican workers they’re so dependent on.

For these Mexicans no jobs mean no money, which means no support for families and communities back home. For the farmers in Canada no help means no harvest, which means no support for families and communities here. Everybody loses.

Jacques Notaro, a lettuce-grower in Québec, is quoted in the article, “If they put an embargo on this [temporary farm workers'] program, it will be catastrophic for me and the great majority of other growers.”

This influenza doesn’t just affect people diagnosed with the illness, it has the potential to devastate entire communities both in Mexico (as it already has experienced this devastation) and in Canada and the U.S. which both rely heavily on migrant workers to sustain local economies.