Wealth geography, environment and hunger: small critic contribution to the current agrarian/agricultural model of the natural resources usage

Authors

  • Carlos Walter Porto Gonçalves

Abstract

The text questions the geopolitical issue implied in the argument about hunger and the environment. It criticizes the current agrarian / agricultural model of the natural resources usage, stating it is a model of economic development of mild regions that has been imposed all over the world at a very high ecological, cultural and political cost. This model has faced the patrimonial, collective and community knowledge, characteristic of populations with distinct rationality from the occidental atomistic-individualistic one, with severe risks to the feeding safety. It analyzes the social-environmental consequences of the current agrarian / agricultural model, the contradictory results of the increase of the world capacity of food production, hunger in the world, the meanings of the Green Revolution from the seventies on, the social-environmental impacts of the agrarian business in the Brazilian cerrado and the complexity of the use of transgenic products. It criticizes the restricted ecological sustentation based on a political realism, and proposes a reflection upon a new rationality for the environmental challenge. It concludes that hunger is not a technical problem, for it does not happen because of the lack of food, but because of the way the food is produced and distributed. Today hunger lives with the provisions necessary to overcome itself.

Author Biography

Carlos Walter Porto Gonçalves

Coordenador do Programa de Pós -graduação em Geografia (Mestrado e Doutorado) da Universidade Federal Fluminense e ex-Presidentre da Associação dos Géografos Brasileiros (1998-2000).

Published

2004-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles