This report argues that Asian countries are at a crossroads in their agriculture strategies. Before them are two farming models: „conventional‟, industrial farming, promoted by the Green Revolution; and sustainable, or ecological, agriculture – involving methods of farming that are gaining increasing acceptance around the world as the most viable way to promote food security and address climate change. Based on secondary research and fieldwork among farmers in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, we highlight the deep problems associated with conventional farming and argue that Asian countries must promote sustainable agriculture with much greater urgency than they are currently doing.

This report argues that Asian countries are at a crossroads in their agriculture strategies. Before them are two farming models: „conventional‟, industrial farming, promoted by the Green Revolution; and sustainable, or ecological, agriculture – involving methods of farming that are gaining increasing acceptance around the world as the most viable way to promote food security and address climate change. Based on secondary research and fieldwork among farmers in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, we highlight the deep problems associated with conventional farming and argue that Asian countries must promote sustainable agriculture with much greater urgency than they are currently doing.

ຂໍ້ເມູນ ແລະ ແຫຼ່ງທີ່ມາ

ຂໍ້ມູນເພີ່ມເຕີມ

ຊ່ອງຂໍ້ມູນ ມູນຄ່າ
ປະເພດຜະລິດຕະພັນຂອງອາລິເຊຍ ບໍ່ມີ
ຊື່ເລື່ອງ This report argues that Asian countries are at a crossroads in their agriculture strategies. Before them are two farming models: „conventional‟, industrial farming, promoted by the Green Revolution; and sustainable, or ecological, agriculture – involving methods of farming that are gaining increasing acceptance around the world as the most viable way to promote food security and address climate change. Based on secondary research and fieldwork among farmers in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, we highlight the deep problems associated with conventional farming and argue that Asian countries must promote sustainable agriculture with much greater urgency than they are currently doing.
ຄຳອະທິບາ This report argues that Asian countries are at a crossroads in their agriculture strategies. Before them are two farming models: „conventional‟, industrial farming, promoted by the Green Revolution; and sustainable, or ecological, agriculture – involving methods of farming that are gaining increasing acceptance around the world as the most viable way to promote food security and address climate change. Based on secondary research and fieldwork among farmers in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, we highlight the deep problems associated with conventional farming and argue that Asian countries must promote sustainable agriculture with much greater urgency than they are currently doing.
ໝວດໝູ່ນິເວດກະສິກຳ
  • ລະບົບປະສົມປະສານ
  • ຫຼຸດຜ່ອນປັດໄຈການຜະລິດ ແລະ ນຳກັບມາໃຊ້ໃໝ່
  • ສຸຂະພາບດິນ
  • ເສດຖະກິດ ແລະ ລາຍຮັບ
  • ສຸຂະພາບ ແລະ ໂພສະນາການ
  • ລະບົບອາຫານທີ່ຍືນຍົງ
  • ຊີວະນາໆພັນ
  • ສະພາບອາກາດ
  • ການຄຸ້ມຄອງ ແລະ ຈັດສັນນ້ຳ
  • ນະໂຍບາຍສະໜັບສະໜູນ
ຄໍາສໍາຄັນດ້ານນິເວດວິທະຍາ
  • ກະສິກຳປ່າໄມ່້
  • ກະສິກຳອະນຸລັກ
  • ກະສິກຳອິນຊີ
  • ຝຸ່ນບົ່ມ
  • ການຈັດການສັດຕູພືດແບບປະສົມປະສານ
  • ຊີວະມວນ
  • ພືດໝູນວຽນ
  • ປຸ໋ຍພືດສົດ
  • ຄວາມອຸດົມສົມບູນຂອງດິນ
  • ຄຸນະພາບດິນ
  • ລາຍຮັບ
  • ຕົ້ນທຶນການຜະລິດ
  • ອາຫານທີ່ຫຼາກຫຼາຍ
  • ສານອາຫານ
  • ໃບຢັ້ງຢືນ
  • ຜົນຜະລິດເພີ່ມຂຶ້ນ
  • ຄວາມໝັ້ນຄົງດ້ານສະບຽງອາຫານ
  • ຊີວະນາໆພັນ
  • ການປົກປັກຮັກສາສິ່ງແວດລ້ອມ
  • ທົ່ງຫຍ້າ
  • ທີ່ຢູ່ອາໄສ
  • ການປ່ຽນແປງຂອງສະພາບອາກາດ
  • ໄພແຫ້ງແລ້ງ
  • ການປັບຕົວຂອງລະບົບນິເວດ
  • ການຈັດການນ້ຳ
  • ລະບົບຂະຫຍາຍ
ອົງການຈັດຕັ້ງປະກອບສ່ວນ ACTION AID
ຜູ້ຂຽນ Mark Curtis Sameer Dossani
ປີ 2012
ປະເພດຂອງເອກະສານ ຄັດຫຍໍ້
ພາສາ ພາສາອັງກິດ
ຂໍ້ມູນພື້ນທີ່
ປະເທດ Asia
ລະດັບບໍລິຫານ 1
ລະດັບບໍລິຫານ 2
Web Link