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         Biotechnology Ethics Agric:     more detail

41. TFI - The Fertilizer Institute: Publications & Business Tools
1995. agricultural biotechnology in the developing world. FAO Research and TechnologyPaper 6. Click here to view file. J. agric. Environ. ethics 993113.
http://www.tfi.org/publications/pubsearch/categorysearch.asp?Scope=BD

42. PJ Eventos (41) 372-1177 - Abrasco
1420 ethics of Bt trangenic plants .Les Levidow, The Open University, UK. Considerationsfor research in agricultural biotechnology. AM Shelton. Sust. agric.
http://www.pjeventos.com.br/sip2002/Programthu.htm

43. Agriculture Center - Genetically Modified Food Page - Boulder Community Network
Systems for biotechnology, See Tests of GMO's; USA Today's online discussion onthe ethics of genetic engineering. Washington biotechnology Council; Washington
http://bcn.boulder.co.us/agric/farmgene.htm

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44. Future Of Agriculture  Questions We Aren
biotechnology on the Ground What Kind of Future Can Farmers Expect and What Kind firstwe should reflect on what the outlines of a true farming ethics would be
http://www.und.edu/misc/ndrural/Future of Agric.htm
Future of Agriculture
The Future of Agriculture on the Great Plains
By William Patrie. Now many commodities produced in the Great Plains are at great risk of being replaced by commodities produced in other parts of the world where land and labor is cheaper and the land is newer and requires less inputs. Others at this conference can report on the commodity price misery being experienced on the Great Plains. I won't, other than to say that it is a necessary time of sadness, for farm families do not want to let go of their position in food chain as commodity producers. It is like dying. But something new is happening. Like crocuses through the snow of Easter, new businesses are forming. They are businesses formed by farmers who ask financially strapped neighbors to invest money and commit quality products. Soybeans are now being sold as oil, durum wheat as pasta, hard red spring wheat as partially baked frozen bread, corn as sweeteners, alfalfa to milk and cheese, hogs as hams, and cattle as dinning entertainment The Future of Agriculture In North Dakota North Dakota Farmers from All Things Considered, (Real Audio) Thursday, July 5, 2001. Reporter Clay Scott travels to rural western North Dakota, a region that demographers predict will lost up to a third of its population over the next two decades. But as many farmers and ranchers continue to leave the area, some are embracing new exotic crops and animals as a way to continue to live off the land in a place they love. (7:00) Curt Stofferahn was interviewed for this report on All Things Considered.

45. LexisNexis Environmental Universe
BioScience. Bioscience, biotechnology Biochemistry previously agric Biol Chem. biotechnologyTechniques previously Biotechnol Progr. Environmental ethics.
http://www.lexisnexis.com/academic/1univ/envir/2easource.htm
Web Services Environmental Pricing Complete Source List for Environment Abstracts General Information Environment Abstracts
(Complete Source List for Environment Abstracts) News, Journals, Commentary
(Complete Source List for News, Journals, Commentary) Codes and Regulations Case Law and Agency Actions Waste and Materials Sample Search ...
(Complete Source List for Third Party Linking)
Accounts of Chemical Research Acid Enviro [includes Acid Magazine] Acid News Acid Precipitation Bulletin Acid Rain Information Publications Acta Polytechnica Scandinavica Acustica Adirondac Advances in Cryogenic Engineering Advances in Environmental Research Advances in Water Resources AERO Sun Times African Environment African Wildlife Agribusiness Agricultural and Forest Meteorology Agricultural Engineering Agricultural Research Agricultural Systems Agricultural Water Management Agroborealis Agroforestry Systems Air Transport World Alces Alternatives Ambio AMC Journal [previously Am Mining Cong J] American Biology Teacher American Demographics American Economic Review American Environmental Laboratory American Forests American Gas American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal American Journal of Agricultural Economics American Journal of Alternative Agriculture American Journal of Public Health American Journal of Science American Laboratory American Nuclear Society Transactions American Rivers American Scientist American Water Works Association Journal

46. ETH Library List Of Journals And Online Links
417G biotechnology techniques P 819333 biotechnology 833924 Botanical onwards HybridomaUE 1230 (not ethics) Immunol Today J Biochem PC 1892 J agric Food Chem
http://www.micro.biol.ethz.ch/~vuilleus/nebis.htm
ETH-BIB journal signatures and online links
last updated 27.11.01
This list reflects my interests and needs rather than the entire choice at ETH. This means that some journals not
listed here, or some not listed as being accessible online, may in fact be subscribed/online by ETH.
Check the official ETH library list of online journals here If there are journals or books you can't find at ETH, you might want to check here which libraries in Switzerland have it. The interlibrary loan form can be found here The form to order journals and books from libraries outside Zurich can be found here Current protocols ONLINE!!! web text version, figures, but no PDF, e. g.
Current protocols in Molecular Biology
Current protocols in Protein Science

Current protocols in Cell Biology

and many others, reachable through the ones above A red dot ( ) below indicates links for which I have checked full text online journal availability.
Hyperlinks are subject to constant modification! Thanks for your feedback... By the way, PDF copies of articles which are not online can be ordered from NEBIS
and received per email.

47. A. ALLAN SCHMID
biotechnology, Plant Variety Protection, and Changing Property Institutions inagriculture ethics A Pragmatic View, Workshop on ethics and Values MSU agric.
http://www.msu.edu/user/schmid/vita.htm
Jan. 2000 Vita
A. ALLAN SCHMID
PERSONAL INFORMATION Home address: 1014 Walbridge, East Lansing, MI 48823 Place of birth: Dawson, Nebraska Date of birth: March 12, 1935 Phone: 517/355-2266 Fax: 517/432-1800 E-mail: schmid@msu.edu
EDUCATION Undergraduate: University of Nebraska, 1956 B.S. Graduate: University of Wisconsin, 1957 M.S. University of Wisconsin, 1959 Ph.D. Academic Specialization: Undergraduate: Agricultural Economics Graduate: Resource economics, general agricultural economics, and regional planning (including courses in law and political science) Thesis Subject: M.S. - The Soil Bank: An Appraisal of the Experience in Rock County, Wisconsin Ph.D. - Water Allocation and Development in Wisconsin Scholastic Honors: Alpha Zeta and Gamma Sigma Delta, scholastic honoraries University Fellow, University of Wisconsin
EXPERIENCE Former Positions: Research Assistant, University of Wisconsin, 1956-1959 Assistant Professor, Michigan State University, 1959-1964 Associate Professor, Michigan State University, 1964-1968 Present Position: University Distinguished Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics and Department of Resource

48. Mbox-37 By Thread
Re Alternative agric News Sept 1999 Lawrence F. London mike richardson; Fwd REFood ethics Review Kirsten FW CGIAR Conference on biotechnology in Developing
http://www.sare.org/htdocs/hypermail/html-home/37-html/
mbox-37 by thread
Starting: Mon 23 Aug 1999 - 21:33:57 EDT
Ending: Fri 24 Sep 1999 - 03:03:58 EDT
Messages:

49. L15-2m
Professional and Applied ethics GradCertProf Appethics Graduate Honours) - BAppSc(agric)(Hons)Bachelor of Applied Science (biotechnology) (Honours) - BAppSc
http://www.csu.edu.au/acadman/l15-2m.htm
APPROVED AWARD NOMENCLATURES
Access Word Document
This list includes all awards offered by the constituent institutions of Charles Sturt University at the time the University was established (in 1989) plus all the awards approved by the Board of Governors or by the Academic Senate and its predecessor bodies.
1. - HONORARY DOCTORATES
Doctor of Applied Science ( honoris causa ) - HonDAppSc
Doctor of Arts ( honoris causa ) - HonDA
Doctor of Business ( honoris causa ) - HonDBus
Doctor of Education ( honoris causa ) - HonDEd
Doctor of Health Studies ( honoris causa ) - HonDHStud
Doctor of Letters ( honoris causa ) - HonDLitt
Doctor of Science ( honoris causa ) - HonDSc
Doctor of the University ( honoris causa ) - HonDUniv 2. - DOCTORATES Doctor of Applied Science - DAppSc Doctor of Arts - DA Doctor of Business - DBus Doctor of Business Administration - DBA Doctor of Education - EdD Doctor of Health Science - DHlthSc Doctor of Philosophy - PhD Doctor of Psychology (Clinical) - DPsych(Clinical) Doctor of Psychology (Forensic) - DPsych(Forensic) Doctor of Public Health - DPH Doctor of Public Policy - DPubPol 3. - MASTER DEGREES BY RESEARCH

50. Coffee
BP 39 EP 66 PG 28 JI J. agric. ethics PY 2001 VL 14 IS 1. to develop a set of sourceson coffee agronomics Advances in coffee biotechnology from AgBiotechNet
http://home.wlu.edu/~blackmerh/coffee/
Coffee: a vade mecum example
10 June 2002
Coffee strikes me as an excellent candidate for a Global Stewardship example, also eminently relevant to examination of environmental justice issues. It's necessary to start to gather up the materials: books in Annie Here's what I found on a Starbuck's cup the other day: Building Relationships With Coffee Growers
By traveling to origin countries and talking
with coffee growers about the quality we
seek, we create truly global partnerships.
It is these valued friedships, built over
many years, that allow us to offer the
world's most exceptional coffees. That can be disassembled and analyzed into a remarkable collection of messages... Here are some links that should be helpful in sorting out this topic: Fair Trade Coffee Campaign and news (globalexchange.org) TransFair USA Equal Exchange Uncommon Grounds Sexto Sol Center for Community Action (Chiapas) Fair Trade Federation VirtualCoffee.com (a zine) and A Quick Guide to Sustainable Coffee Mountain Groan In Chiapas, fair-trade coffee farming is backbreaking and hazardous. Picking the beans is the easy part. BY JULIE GROSSMAN EL BOSQUE, MEXICO From JSTOR: The Struggle for Control of a Commodity Chain: Instant Coffee from Latin America (in Research Reports and Notes) John M. Talbot Latin American Research Review, Vol. 32, No. 2. (1997), pp. 117-135.

51. I Am A Firm Believer In The People. If Given The Truth, They Can
1997. biotechnology in agriculture. Clark, E. Ann. 1999. Environment, Economics, andEthics. Chapman and Hall, New York. Amer. J. Altern. agric. 12(3)133139.
http://www.plant.uoguelph.ca/research/homepages/eclark/ethics.htm
G enetic Engineering in Field Crops: Ethics and Academia E. Ann Clark Plant Agriculture University of Guelph eaclark@uoguelph.ca Presented to the Annual Meeting of the Saskatchewan Institute of Agrologists, April 1999
I am a firm believer in the people.
If given the truth, they can be depended on to meet any national crisis.
The great point is to bring them the real facts. Abraham Lincoln
  • When British shoppers were reportedly quite willing to buy tomato paste openly labelled as genetically engineered a few years ago, were they making an informed decision? Did they know the real facts? Do Canadian shoppers buying unlabelled transgenic potato products marketed under well known brands know enough to ask whether they should be patronizing these products?
    Do American consumers of dairy products realize that rBST was approved by the US FDA based in part on a proponent-written summary of a 90 day feeding trial with 30 rats - a trial which has never been subject to peer review and published? Have they learned that a more critical review of the actual data from same trial revealed major discrepancies between the proponent summary of "no toxicologically significant changes" and the actual trial results showing that range of rBST-induced adverse health effects? Or that this issue contributed to the 14 Jan 99 Canadian decision to reject rBST, despite 9 years of intensive lobbying by Monsanto?

52. UnCover@UTK Articles Received By Journal Title And Department
$17.75 Totals for Journal Title 1 $17.75 $17.75 biotechnology AND BIOENGINEERING. Totalsfor Journal Title 3 $83.25 $27.75 Criminal justice ethics. agric.
http://www.lib.utk.edu/~colldev/uncover01/artjour.html

53. Publications By Cambridge University Animal Welfare Information Centre
Food agric. 73, 337348. 12. The effects of biotechnology on animal welfare. InAnimal biotechnology and ethics, ed. A. Holland and A. Johnson, 69-82.
http://www.animal-info.net/hosting/cuawic/publications.html
Books Papers Abstracts
Reviews and Reports most recent Books [back to top] Broom, D.M. (Editor) 1986. Farmed Animals (pp.160). New York: Torstar Books (translated into Japanese, Italian). Messent, P.R. and Broom, D.M. (Editors) 1986. Encyclopaedia of Domestic Animals (pp.3 17). Grolier International. Serpell, J.A. 1986. In the Company of Animals (pp.2 Oxford, New York: Blackwell. Books 1988 [back to top] Serpell, J.A. and others (Editors) 1988. Companion Animals in Society (pp.78). London: Council for Science and Society. Books 1990 [back to top] Fraser, A.F. and Broom, D.M. 1990. Farm Animal Behaviour and Welfare (pp.437). (formerly London : Bail1i~re Tindall) Wallingford: CAB International. Books 1993 [back to top] Broom, D.M. and Johnson, K.G. 1993. Stress and Animal Welfare (pp. 211). London: Chapman and Hall Books 1994 [back to top] Manning, A. and Serpell, J. (Editors) 1994. Animals and Human Society (pp. 199). London : Routledge.

54. Academic Centres
ethics Office ext 301 (agric.) 7015 Ms. Haihong Wang 301 (agric.) 7015 Dr Nationalagricultural and Veterinary biotechnology Centre (NAVBC), BioResearch Ireland.
http://www.ucd.ie/phone/acad_centres.html
ACADEMIC CENTRES
Advanced Manufacturing Technology Centre (AMT Centre)
211 (Eng.) 1888 Mr Patrick T. Connolly, Director
014 (Eng.) 1768 Postgraduates
AMT Ireland
Telephone Number: 716 1881 Fax Number: 269 6035
209 (Eng.) 1725 Mr. Donal Hughes, Director
220 (Eng.) 1729 Mr David Heeran, Centre Manager
220 (Eng.) 1733 Mr James Ryder, Senior Project Engineer
220 (Eng.) 1993 Mr Kieran Ryan, Senior Consultant
220 (Eng.) 1731 Mr. Micheál Armstrong, AVALON Project Manager
220 (Eng.) 1881 Ms Helen Altman, Centre Administrator
Applied Language Centre
Daedalus Building, Belfield, Dublin 4
Fax Number: 716 1188 E-mail: ALC@ucd.ie or Info@ALC.ucd.ie
Room 01 7900 Ms Mary Ruane, Director
Course Administration 7900/7963 Mr Hugo O'Donnell 7900 Ms Caroline Dunne 7900/7928 Ms. Lynsey Griffith

55. The Place Of Value In A World Of Change - Food And Material Security Through Int
BAG X293000 PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA E.Mail jbrink@vopi.agric.za. Heden, CG TheGlobal Commons and Professional ethics in biotechnology, Contribution to
http://ekvitec.com/seminar00/presentations_dasilva5.htm
The Place of Value in a World of Change - Food and Material Security Through International
Co-operation in Biotechnology*
Cancelled presentation
By Edgar J. DaSilva Director, Life Sciences Section
BETCENS
The Biotechnology Action Council (BAC) was established by UNESCO in 1990  to promote education and training in plant biology and biotechnology, and aquatic biotechnology, especially in the developing countries and those in economic transition, through the programme activities such as: short-term fellowships, distribution of manuals, organization of training courses and workshops, biotechnology professorships,  UNESCO Chairs, and  the network of Biotechnology Education and Training Centers (BETCENs) (Fig 5). Fig.5 Left to right: I.Vasil, and Rita Colwell (USA)- former Chairs -Unesco Biotechnology Action Council; and MIRCEN Directors’ Council; and E. DaSilva (UNESCO, France Since its inception, UNESCO/BAC has awarded close to 500 fellowships, 25 Biotechnology Professorships, and established UNESCO Chairs in plant biotechnology in Belgium, Burkina Faso, China, and Uganda. Laboratories.  BAC, in 1995, established five regional BETCENS in China, Hungary, Mexico, the Palestine Territory and South Africa with programme activities as described below:

56. UGPSS
biotechnology, 4. PSS 4100, Seminar, 1, PSS 4301, agric. Compounds, 3. Continuedenhancement of education skills and adherence to professional ethics. 4131.
http://www.ttu.edu/~offpub/01ugpss.html
Department of Plant and Soil Science Professor Dick Auld, Chairperson. Horn Professor Nguyen; Thornton Distinguished Professor V. Allen; Rockwell Professor B. L. Allen; Leidigh Professor Krieg; Piper Professor Hopper; Professors Abernathy, R. Allen, Bennett, Thorvilson, and Zartman; Associate Professors Armstrong, Dotray, Peffley, and Phillips; Assistant Professors Green, Maurer, Montague, and Xu; Instructor McKenney; Adjunct Faculty: Archer, Blum, Boman, Brashears, Bronson, Burke, Calhoun, Gannaway, Hequet, Keeling, Lascano, Leser, Mahan, Maunder, McMichael, Oliver, Peterson, Porter, Rosenow, Rummel, Sheetz, Stout, Trolinder, Upchurch, Velten, Wanjura, Wheeler, and Zobeck; Emeritus Faculty: Dregne, Matches, Tereshkovich, and Zukauckas. This department supervises the following degree programs: AGRONOMY, HORTICULTURE, and INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT, Bachelor of Science ; CROP SCIENCE, ENTOMOLOGY, HORTICULTURE, and SOIL SCIENCE, Master of Science ; AGRONOMY, Doctor of Philosophy . A minimum of 134 hours are required for graduation. Students in the departmental areas of agronomy, horticulture, and integrated pest management investigate the basic biological, physical, and social sciences, and more importantly, bring such knowledge to focus on problems in pest control and plant development through genetics, plant growth through management, and plant material use for food, fiber, or the aesthetic good of humankind.

57. UGPSS
PSS 4100, Seminar, 1, PSS 4301, agric. Plant biotechnology Required electives AAEC2305 or ECO 2301 of education skills and adherence to professional ethics.
http://www.ttu.edu/~offpub/ugpss.html
Department of Plant and Soil Science Professor Dick Auld, Chairperson. Horn Professor Nguyen; Thornton Distinguished Professor V. Allen; Rockwell Professor B. L. Allen; Leidigh Professor Krieg; Piper Professor Hopper; Professors Abernathy, R. Allen, Maas, Peffley, Thorvilson, and Zartman; Associate Professors Armstrong, Dotray, Green, and Phillips; Assistant Professors Maurer, McKenney, Montague, and Xu; Adjunct Faculty: Archer, Boman, Brashears, Bronson, Burke, Calhoun, Gannaway, Hequet, Keeling, Lascano, Leser, Mahan, Maunder, McMichael, Oliver, Peterson, Porter, Rosenow, Rummel, Sheetz, Stout, Trolinder, Upchurch, Velten, Wanjura, Wheeler, and Zobeck; Emeritus Faculty: Dregne, Matches, Tereshkovich, and Zukauckas. This department supervises the following degree programs: AGRONOMY, HORTICULTURE, and INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT, Bachelor of Science ; CROP SCIENCE, ENTOMOLOGY, HORTICULTURE, and SOIL SCIENCE, Master of Science ; AGRONOMY, Doctor of Philosophy . A minimum of 134 hours are required for graduation. Students in the departmental areas of agronomy, horticulture, and integrated pest management investigate the basic biological, physical, and social sciences, and more importantly, bring such knowledge to focus on problems in pest control and plant development through genetics, plant growth through management, and plant material use for food, fiber, or the aesthetic good of humankind.

58. Publications
J. agric. Food. biotechnology and Bioengineering Vol. 44 337346. NZ 1993. Ling, N.1993 Lower Vertebrate ethics - a plea for a common sense approach. Proc.
http://bio.waikato.ac.nz/publications.shtml
Publications
Waikato Home Dept. Areas Dept Home Careers Events Hot Sites Papers Postgrad Study Publications Research Services Staff Undergrad Study Other Depts. Chemistry Co-op Ed CSTER Earth Sciences
Publications in Animal Physiology
Leuvenink, H.G.D., McLeay, L.M., Bleumer, E.J.B. and Kruys, P. (1995) Effects of propionate infusion on feed intake and insulin in sheep. Proc. Society Nutritional Physiology 4. Leuvenink, H.G.D., McLeay, L.M., Bleumer, E.J.B. and Kruys, P. (1995) Effects of propionate infusion on feed intake and insulin in sheep. Proc. Society Nutritional Physiology 4.
Publications in Biochemistry
Carr, P., and Daniel, R.M. 1995 Life in hot water New Zealand Science Monthly 6, 8-9 Cowan, D.A., and Daniel, R.M. 1995 Rapid purification of two thermophilic proteinases using dye-ligand chromatography. Journal Biochem. Biophys. Methods 1136 Daniel, R.M. 1993 How stable can proteins be? Chem NZ 51 . Daniel, R.M. 1994 The contribution of enzymes to food processing. Nutrition in a sustainable environment, Ed. M Wahlquist et al, pub. Smith-Gordon, UK. pp 724-727.

59. UNIVERSITY OF BENIN
agric Biochemistry Food Chemistry; Nutritional Biochemistry/Ruminant Plant TissueCulture/biotechnology; Nematology. Old Testament Studies Religious ethics.
http://www.uniben.edu/advert/positions.htm
P.M.B. 1154, Benin City, Nigeria VACANCIES FOR ACADEMIC POSTS INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL ADVERTISEMENT Qualification and Experience Method of Application Applications are invited from suitably qualified candidates for the following vacant academic positions in the University. FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES (a) Department of Accounting
  • Professor/Associate Professor Senior Lecturer Lecturer I/II
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Managerial Accounting Auditing Taxation Computer Application in Accounting
  • (b) Department Economics and Statistics
  • Professor/Associate Professor Senior Lecturer Lecturer I/II
  • Areas of Specialization
  • International Trade and Finance Human Capital Econometrics
  • (c) Department of Business Administration
  • Senior Lecturers Lecturer I/II
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Quantitative Techniques in Business Decision Making Marketing Behavioural Science Finance Human Resources Management
  • (d) Department of Geography and Regional Planning
  • Professor/Associate Professor Senior Lecturer Lecturer I/II
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Geomorphology Urban and Regional Planning
  • (e) Department of Political Science and Public Administration
  • Professor/Associate Professor
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Public Administration
  • (f) Department of Sociology and Anthropology
  • Professor/Associate Professor Senior Lecturer Lecturer I/II
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Cultural Anthropology (Professor/Associate Professor) Social Work/Social Administration (Professor/Associate Professor) Social Psychology Sociological Theories Research Methods Sociology of Development
  • 60. FAO:AG21:Magazine:Spotlight:Crop Science And Ethics
    Spotlight / Opinion Crop science and ethics by Louise O. Fresco AssistantDirector General, FAO Agriculture Department "Globalization is a growing trend also in science, where knowledge is being privatized" eing a crop scientist today is not easy. Genetically modified organisms. Ultimately, biotechnology will allow a more health problems resulting from biotechnology have been documented to
    http://www.fao.org/ag/magazine/0010sp1.htm
    Search
    Gateway... AG: Agriculture Department AGA: Animal production/health AGE: FAO/IAEA Joint Division AGL: Land and water development AGP: Plant production/protection AGS: Agric. support systems CGRFA: Genetic resources Magazine home spotlight archive Guides site subjects resources
    Spotlight / Opinion
    Crop science and ethics
    by Louise O. Fresco
    Assistant-Director General, FAO Agriculture Department
    "Globalization is a growing trend also in science, where knowledge is being privatized" eing a crop scientist today is not easy. Although crop research was chiefly responsible for last century's fourfold increase in average yields and sixfold rise in total harvest, biological agricultural science is increasingly equated with threats to human health, environmental degradation and, above all, genetically-modified "frankenfood". In order to continue their contribution to human development, crop scientists must regain credibility and public acceptance. That process might begin by analysing, from an ethical perspective, trends in the world around us and the scientific challenges they pose. Basic trend: uneven distribution of food.

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