转基因生物监管的机会之窗:从气候政策到转基因生物监管,通过限额与交易模式实现食品完整性

G. Steier
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引用次数: 1

摘要

转基因生物是我们集中的食品系统的环节,在很大程度上依赖于国际贸易。转基因生物本质上是不可持续的,因为它们减少了生物多样性,破坏了环境,并在单一栽培、工业化农业和生物多样性枯竭之间建立了正反馈循环,从而危及食品安全、保障和主权。跨国企业集团,简称大农业集团,影响着多边粮食贸易,以其数量少而数量多的作物充斥着国际市场,同时控制着世界范围内农业和粮食生产的大部分方面。本文聚焦大西洋两岸关于转基因作物的争论,运用比较法探讨借鉴气候变化政策的总量管制与交易模式如何有助于分散当前的粮食系统,从而有可能恢复以地方为导向的农业和粮食完整性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Window of Opportunity for GMO Regulation: Achieving Food Integrity Through Cap-and-Trade Models from Climate Policy for GMO Regulation
GMOs are the links of our centralized food system, largely dependent on international trade. GMOs are inherently unsustainable because they reduce biodiversity, harm the environment, and empower positive feedback loops between monocultures, industrial agriculture, and biodiversity depletion, thereby jeopardizing food safety, security, and sovereignty. Conglomerates of multi-national companies, in short BigAg, shape multi-lateral food trade and flood international markets with their small array and enormous volumes of crops, while controlling large aspects of agriculture and food production world-wide. Zooming in on the trans-Atlantic dispute about GE crops, this paper uses comparative law to explore how a cap-and-trade model borrowed from climate change policy might help to decentralize the current food system, thereby potentially restoring locally-oriented agriculture and food integrity.
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