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Registros recuperados: 146 | |
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Paull, John. |
Agent Orange Day, 10th August, is a day for us to remember the raison d'être of the organics movement. It was on this day, 51 years ago, that the USA embarked on the most audacious and extensive program of chemical warfare that the world has witnessed. Continuously, over a decade (1961-1971), vast swathes of Vietnam's forests, waterways, and croplands were drenched and re-drenched in high dosage agricultural herbicides, reportedly up to 50 times the recommended dosages. The US military intention was to denude the land of forests and crops, and, on these crude terms, it was a success. Estimates put the area of Vietnam affected at three million hectares (7.4 million acres). The objective was to deny cover and crops to ‘the enemy’. The Viet Cong were fighting... |
Tipo: Newspaper or magazine article |
Palavras-chave: Environmental aspects; Knowledge management. |
Ano: 2012 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/27566/7/27566.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
The Australian National Standard for Organic and Bio-Dynamic Produce was first issued in 1992, and revised editions have appeared in 1998, 2002 and 2007. It is an export standard and serves as a de facto domestic standard. It is currently freely available for download. There is a proposaal that the copyright residing in organic standards in Australia be relinquished to a private company which licences and profits from the sale of standards. This article questions this standards-for-sale model and asks whether the community and the organic cause are better served by the standard remaining as an Open Access document, rather than a pay-per-view document. |
Tipo: Newspaper or magazine article |
Palavras-chave: Australia Knowledge management Values; Standards and certification. |
Ano: 2007 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/13093/1/13093.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
“The illusion of plenty” and “poverty in plenty” are notions that Lord Northbourne raised in his manifesto of organic agriculture, Look to the Land. At the launch of this new journal, Plenty, it is timely to revisit Northbourne’s reflections on the topic. In the current epidemic of obesity, where 25% of Australians, 23% of British, and 34% of Americans are obese, we witness the manifestations of Northbourne’s notions of “the illusion of plenty” and “poverty in plenty”. We live in a time when the super obese may be extricated from their homes by a demolition team knocking down walls, may be transported to hospital in specially reinforced fat-mobile ambulances, and may be CT scanned in machines that are otherwise used for large zoo animals . Such... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: Values; Standards and certification Food systems History of organics Knowledge management. |
Ano: 2014 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/27540/7/27540.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
From its inception the Soil Association was linked with emerging organic thinking in Australia and New Zealand. When the Association was formed in 1946 two of its founder members were residents of Australia and New Zealand, there were already three like minded associations in the region, and the first issue of ‘Mother Earth’ included three articles from antipodean sources. Given this influence it is perhaps no surprise that in the late fifties the Association’s founder, Eve Balfour, spent a year visiting Australia and New Zealand – arriving an ambassador of the Soil Association, and leaving an ambassador for Australia. |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: "Organics" in general; Australia; United Kingdom; History of organics. |
Ano: 2011 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/20947/1/Paull2011MotherEarth.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
China is at the onset of an organic agriculture revolution. From 2000 to 2006, China has moved from 45th to 2nd position in the world in number of hectares under organic management. China now has more land under organic horticulture than any other country. In the year 2005/2006, China added 12% to the world’s organic area. This accounted for 63% of the world’s annual increase in organic land, and China now has 11% of the world’s organically managed land. The antecedents to China’s Organic Revolution are examined, and reveal further growth potential in the Chinese organic sector. Longitudinal analysis of China’s food production statistics reveals explosive growth, and the consequent capacity for export has implications for food exporting nations. China has... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: Food security; Food quality and human health "Organics" in general Regulation Education; Extension and communication China. |
Ano: 2007 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/10949/1/10949.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Tasmania, Australia's island state, appears to have a huge potential for organic agriculture. The state has a higher proportion of rural dwellers than other Australian states, it has a long tradition of successful agricultural pursuits dating from the earliest European settlement, it is the only state with its own own organic certifier, and geographically it is well placed to capitalise on its clean and green image. Statistics reporting organic farms per capita for Tasmania and Australia are presented and compared with other jurisdictions. |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: Australia; "Organics" in general; World. |
Ano: 2006 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/10021/1/100021.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Henry Shoobridge (1874-1963) was the pioneer of organic farming in Tasmania. He was the founder and the president of the island’s earliest organics advocacy group, the Living Soil Association of Tasmania (1946- 1960). The Shoobridge family had emigrated from Kent, England in 1822 bringing with them the hops cuttings with which they established hops as a successful primary industry in Tasmania. Henry Shoobridge was schooled at The Friend’s School, the Quaker school in Hobart. The Shoobridges pioneered the farming of hops in Tasmania, and Henry followed his forebears in this work. At the age of 71 years, Henry Shoobridge founded the Living Soil Association of Tasmania (LSAT) at a public meeting in Hobart on 30 August 1946. The LSAT affiliated with the... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: History of organics Education; Extension and communication Australia. |
Ano: 2010 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/16971/1/16971.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
A landmark case against the planting of GMO crops in Australia has delivered a big win for GMO farmers and produced no protection for organic farmers. The case pitted farmer against farmer. An organic farmer, Steve Walsh, initiated the legal action against his GMO growing neighbour, Michael Baxter in the Supreme Court of Western Australia. The Marsh and Baxter farms (477 hectares and 900 ha. respectively) are adjacent to each other and located in Kojonup, 260 km south east of the capital city of Perth in the wheat belt of Western Australia (WA) - and coincidentally nearby Broomhill was one of the earliest sites in the development of the organic movement in Australia (from 1930). Just before Baxter's first crop of Monsanto’s genetically modified (GM)... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: Farming Systems Social aspects Values; Standards and certification Environmental aspects Regulation. |
Ano: 2014 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/26549/7/26549.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Korea’s Organic World Congress (OWC) was a milestone for Korea, for Asia, and for the world. It perhaps signals an Asian Spring for organics where Korea, in particular, and Asia, in general, are set to make rapid progress in meeting their aspirations and goals for reclaiming food and agriculture as organic. Korea’s OWC can serve to reinvigorate the momentum of organics in Asia where the organic statistics are dominated by the ‘organic giants’ of China and India. One remarkable enduring legacy of the OWC is the Namyangju Organic Museum. It is the world’s first museum dedicated to organic agriculture and was launched to coincide with the OWC. It is housed in a bold and strikingly modern new building. The museum presents a timeline of the history of organic... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: "Organics" in general Values; Standards and certification Knowledge management. |
Ano: 2012 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/20839/4/20839.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
The present review of the Independent Review of the South Australian GM Food Crop Moratorium (Anderson, 2019) reveals that the so-called Independent Review is not independent at all and thus it falls at the first hurdle. Kym Anderson is a long term vocal advocate of genetically modified crops and has expressed such views regularly over the past two decades. The Independent Review was commissioned by the South Australian Minister for Primary Industries and Regional Development. There were 216 public submissions, of these, 78% (n=168) were for retaining the existing Moratorium, 18% (n=39) were for scrapping the Moratorium, and 4% (n=8) were undecided. 100% of the food available in Australian supermarkets is GM-free which mirrors the sentiments of Australian... |
Tipo: Report |
Palavras-chave: Farming Systems Values; Standards and certification Food systems Environmental aspects. |
Ano: 2019 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/35027/1/Paull2019.SA.GM.MoratoriumReview.na.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Just four years elapsed between the coining of the term ‘organic farming’ and the founding of an association devoted to the advocacy of organic farming. The world’s first association devoted to the promotion and proliferation of organic agriculture, the Australian Organic Farming and Gardening Society (AOFGS), was founded in Sydney, Australia, in October 1944. It is a geographically surprising sequel to the coining of the term ‘organic farming’ by Lord Northbourne and its first appearance in war-time Britain. Northbourne’s manifesto of organic farming, Look to the Land, was published in London in May 1940. When the AOFGS published a periodical, the Organic Farming Digest, it was the first association to publish an organics advocacy journal. The present... |
Tipo: Journal paper |
Palavras-chave: Farming Systems; Australia; History of organics. |
Ano: 2015 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/28825/7/28825.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
The tiny cluster of islands known as San Juan, Washington State, at the north West tip of the USA, has voted by a clear margin to ban the production of GMO crops and animals. The proposition was voted in by 61% to 39% (5183 ‘Yes’ votes vs. 3329 ‘No’ votes). Of the 19 San Juan precincts, all bar the two smallest supported the ban. Voters of the county were invited to endorse the following straight forward proposition: “Initiative Measure No. 2012-4 concerns the growing of genetically modified organisms in San Juan County. This measure would make it unlawful to propagate, cultivate, raise or grow plants, animals and other organisms which have been genetically modified and provides penalties and destruction of such organisms. Should this measure be enacted... |
Tipo: Newspaper or magazine article |
Palavras-chave: Consumer issues; Food systems; Regulation. |
Ano: 2012 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/27563/7/27563.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Organic agriculture could feed the world, but will it? A state of Otopia, an organic Utopia of 100% organic food and organic agriculture, is a dream, or is it a pipe-dream? And if a dream, then when might it manifest? Two scenarios are presented, extrapolating from the rate of growth of the organics sector achieved over the past decade. Under a geometric rate of growth, Otopia could be achieved in 39 years, whereas under an arithmetic rate of growth, Otopia would take 544 years to be achieved. |
Tipo: Newspaper or magazine article |
Palavras-chave: "Organics" in general; Farming Systems; Food systems; Research methodology and philosophy; Knowledge management. |
Ano: 2011 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/18898/1/Paull2011OtopiaACOM.pdf |
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Paull, John. |
Readers of narratives of the history of organic farming in Australia will be familiar with such accounts beginning in the "1980s". In questing after the earliest organic farming society, and more particularly in pursuing the spread of the "organic" meme from its 1940 birth in Britain, it was therefore a great surprise to uncover the Australian Organic Faming and Gardening Society (AOFGS) founded in October 1944. This appears to be the world's first "organic farming" association. It also resets the organic clock for Australia back by four decades. Here was an association, pre-dating the UK Soil Association by two years, formed half a world away from the birthplace of "organic", in a country at war, under food rationing, and with its workforce under... |
Tipo: Conference paper, poster, etc. |
Palavras-chave: Environmental aspects United States Australia History of organics Farming Systems Values; Standards and certification United Kingdom. |
Ano: 2008 |
URL: http://orgprints.org/15097/1/15097.pdf |
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Registros recuperados: 146 | |
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