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Drought in Morocco

Drought in Morocco

As long as we’re still in the month of Ramadan, it is high time to address another lawful activity from which we are prohibited – drinking (water, that is). Or rather, the politics around water and the world’s shrinking freshwater supply. Many regions throughout the planet are experiencing drought – the southwestern United States, Australia, [...]

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Food, Water, and Utility Sovereignty in Bolivia

Food, Water, and Utility Sovereignty in Bolivia

“Food sovereignty” is the notion that the people, rather than market forces, have the right to define their food and agricultural systems (by redistributing land to smallholder farmers, encouraging self-sufficient farming, and so on). It goes beyond “food security,” which is merely about ensuring that everyone has enough to eat. Food sovereignty looks at the [...]

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Alcoholism and Premature Male Deaths in Russia

Alcoholism and Premature Male Deaths in Russia

There is a hadith about how as we near the Day of Judgment, there will be fifty women for every one man. It may be figurative (for example, eligible single women will outnumber eligible bachelors). Or, in the case of post-WWII Russia, it may be more literal – as in, there are literally more women [...]

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A Tale of Food and No Fuel – Part II: North Korea

If Ramadan is the supposed to be the month of fasting and sympathizing with the world’s hungry, then there is one country whose people take the cake (so to speak) for going through unimaginable starvation and suffering during the 1990s. The culture and spirit of North Korea, after the Korean War of the early 1950s, has [...]

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A Tale of Food and No Fuel – Part I: Cuba

For thirty years, Cuba was incorporated into the economy of the Soviet Union. Eastern Europe would export wheat and other foodstuffs to Cuba, as well as inputs for industrialized agriculture (such as tractors, pesticides, and fossil fuels); Cuba, in turn, would export sugarcane from her industrialized state-owned farms to Russia and East Germany. The collapse [...]

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Mexican Migration and Food Policy

Mexican Migration and Food Policy

With Arizona having passed the draconian Senate Bill 1070, sections of which were blocked by US District Judge Susan Bolton last July, it is high time to seriously think about why so many migrants are coming to the US from Mexico and Central America in the first place, which is something most US policymakers don’t [...]

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Yes to Polenta, No to Couscous: The Pros and Cons of Eating Local

Yes to Polenta, No to Couscous: The Pros and Cons of Eating Local

When it comes to eating, there has been a growing trend throughout the United States and Canada, and also Europe, to “buy local,” whether it be purchasing local, seasonal foods from farmer’s markets, or joining a CSA (Community-Supported Agriculture, a model of food distribution that supports local agriculture). There seem to be roughly two main [...]

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Food and Tropical Disease

Food and Tropical Disease

With flood waters providing a perfect breeding ground for waterborne disease in Pakistan (including typhoid, gastroenteritis, dengue, and malaria) I thought it was only appropriate to write a Ramadan article on the link between agriculture and water-based disease vectors – namely, the mosquitoes that transmit malaria. These days, malaria afflicts developing countries. Even with climate [...]

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