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""Fruit Trees"" takes readers on a global journey through the diverse world of fruit-bearing trees, exploring their botany, cultural significance, and sustainable cultivation practices. This comprehensive guide emphasizes the importance of fruit trees in global food security, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable agriculture, particularly in the face of climate change. The book begins with a historical overview of fruit tree domestication and explores how human migration influenced their spread across continents. It then delves into the botanical diversity of fruit trees, examining major families and their characteristics. The cultural significance of these trees in various societies is...
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Fifty or more developing countries still depend mainly on the tropical commodities or minerals that they produce. But encouraging so many countries to grow coffee, sugar, cotton and other crops has been a disaster. Small farmers get only a tiny share of the final tag on these commodities on supermarket shelves in the North. Prices have collapsed, terms of trade between North and South have widened, and foreign exchange earnings, tax revenues, and economic growth in developing countries have plummeted. Peter Robbins examines how this situation came about, the current trading arrangements and the possible ways forward. He argues that, if developing countries are to measure up to the scale of the disaster facing them, they must take a leaf out of supply side economics, and take the measures to bring supply and demand into a balance that will secure them far higher and more stable prices.