Traversing the middle part of the United States, I got the opportunity to visit once thriving Native American settlements (Mesa Verde, Chaco Canyon, and the Cahokia Mounds) where the local inhabitants had obviously belonged to wider trading and cultural networks. I experienced a wide array of agricultural landscapes: pasturelands in the Shenandoah Valley and Wyoming; apple orchards in Virginia; dairy
farms in Wisconsin; wheat fields in Montana; cotton fields in Georgia; abandoned tobacco fields in North Carolina that had reverted to forests; and many other agricultural landscapes. Most impressive, though, was the sea of corn that surrounded us from Ohio to North Dakota. To locavores and food activists this is probably the most despicable part of America, but I couldn't help but think how much worse off we would all be without itâand be thoroughly impressed by how much of an agricultural powerhouse the United States is.
Americans seem to take their extraordinary agricultural sector for granted and, in my experience, are typically unable to imagine that sometimes things can go horribly wrong. I never experienced hunger myself, but my parents did. My father was born in Tokyo in 1936 and my mother in Kyushu in 1941. They both suffered through the deprivations of the Second World War and its aftermath. As a child, my father, like many others, was sent away to the Japanese countryside in order to escape the firebombing of his city. To this day he can't stand kabocha squashes and sweet potatoes, as these were the only foods available to himâand even then, he was not fed the sweet potato itself but the vines. My mother told me more times than I care to remember that one of her dreams as a child was to get the opportunity to eat a full bowl of rice. She was the youngest of ten children, only five of whom made it to the age of 20. One of my surviving aunts, severely malnourished as a child, suffered significant rheumatism and osteoporosis for the rest of her life as a result.
True, many other people have had it worse than the Japanese and the members of my family. Yet, it seems that one of the main lessons to be learned from my native country's experience over the last century and a half is that pushes towards autarkic food policies can only result in disaster. As we wrote in the bookâand as many other people have said before usâif goods don't cross borders, armies eventually will. My parent's generation is living proof that what militaristic people thought they could only achieve by force can be accomplished much more effectively and successfully through free trade and peace. And, just as important,
globalization affords people all kinds of possibilities. About half a century ago, my parents never imagined how abundant and affordable their future food supply would turn out to be (let alone that one of their children would marry a foreigner and move to Canada).
As the Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker observes in
The Better Angels of Our Nature
, we may be living in the most peaceful time in our species' existence. This blessed state of affairs, though, was a long time coming and was only made possible through the worldwide exchange of products, resources, ideas, and culture. Despite our current economic woes, we have almost vanquished famine. Most of us live longer, healthier, safer, and more enjoyable lives than previous generations. It seems incumbent upon us to put forward some constructive proposals to improve the global food supply chain rather than turn back the clock to some imagined era of pastoral bliss that most people escaped from when given the opportunity. Growing more and better quality food, and doing so ever more efficiently, healthily, safely, and sustainably is what we should aim for.
Food cosmopolitanism is in everybody's and the planet's best interest. It is my hope that “Buy Local” will soon be replaced by the more desirable slogan, “Buy GlobalâThe Planet Is Our Garden!”
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Hiroko Shimizu
NOTES
Foreword
3
Ingo Potrykus. 2010. “Regulation must be Revolutionized.”
Nature
466: 561.
Preface
1
According to a rough estimate, Japanese people suffered on average one year of famine out of seven between 600 AD and 1885. The last major famine to hit the islands occurred in the 1830s (see Osamu Saito. 2002. “The Frequency of Famines as Demographic Correctives in the Japanese Past.” In Tim Dyson and Cormac à Gráda (eds).
Famine Demography: Perspectives from the Past and Present
. Oxford University Press, pp. 218â239). For readers fluent in Japanese, see the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries discussion of what present day self-sufficiency would entail in terms of available food supply at
http://www.maff.go.jp/j/zyukyu/index.html
.
2
We discuss these issues in much greater detail in chapter 4.
5
On average, farmers in African countries use 8 kilograms of synthetic fertilizers per hectare as opposed to 107 kilograms in the developing world as a whole.
7
Malnutrition or undernutrition refers to either or both a calorie and micronutrient (vitamins and minerals) deficit. Stunting occurs when an individual's stature is too short relative to his or her age and wasting when his or her weight is too low. For a more detailed introduction to the topic and the latest statistics on world hunger, see the “Hunger Portal” of the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations at
http://www.fao.org/hunger/en/
.
Introduction
2
Pépin has discussed his failed doctoral proposal in a few venues, such as in Grace Russo Bullaro. 2009. “Blue Collar, White Hat: The Working Class Origins of Celebrity Superstar Jacques Pepin.”
The Columbia Journal of American Studies
, Volume 9 (Fall), pp. 28â47
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cjas/Jacques_Pepin.html
.
4
As of this writing, less than 0.6% of the U.S. population was employed as full-time farmers while several others supplemented their farm production income with other off-farms sources of revenue. For a concise portrait of the evolution of this sector in the context of the overall U.S. economy, see Carolyn Dimitri, Anne Effland, and Neilson Conklin. 2005.
The 20th Century Transformation of U.S. Agriculture and Farm Policy
. Electronic Information Bulletin No. 3, USDA
http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/eib3/eib3.htm
. The reference to lawyers is borrowed from Peter C. Timmer. 2009.
A World without Agriculture? The Historical Paradox of Agricultural Development
. Development Policy Outlook, American
Enterprise Institute, May
http://www.aei.org/docLib/01%20DPO%20May%202009g.pdf
.
5
In essence, vitalism is the belief that a molecule produced in a bird's or a cow's stomach is inherently superior to a chemically identical molecule produced through industrial processes.
9
The label “SOLE food” is usually traced back to a 2006 entry on the Ethi-curean blog.
11
Of course, political problems still prevent nearly one individual in seven from eating a satisfactory diet, but political problems rather than food production per se are the real cause of this situation.
12
The terms “localvorism” and “localvores” are also used by some activists. Our choice of “locavore” was motivated by its more common usage and its selection as “word of the year” by the
New Oxford American Dictionary
in 2007.
17
For a concise presentation of these alleged advantages from a proponent of this shopping lifestyle, see Molly Watson.
Eight Reasons to Eat Local Foods. Straight-Forward Benefits of Eating Local Foods
.
About.com
Guide
http://local-foods.about.com/od/finduselocalfoods/tp/5-Reasons-to-Eat-Local-Foods.htm
For a more detailed discussion of these arguments, see Steve Martinez, Michael Hand, Michelle Da Pra, Susan Pollack, Katherine Ralston, Travis Smith, Stephen Vogel, Shellye Clark, Luanne Lohr, Sarah Low and Constance Newman. 2010.
Local Food Systems: Concepts, Impacts, and Issues
. Economic Research Report #97. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Economic Research Service
http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/ERR97/ERR97.pdf
.