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The Nature of Agricultural Systems: Food Security and Environmental Balance

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The Nature of Agricultural Systems: Food Security and Environmental Balance
Author(s)Cassman, K. G.; Harwood, R. R.
AbstractGlobal food security in the future will depend on growth in production in those areas of the world with favourable soils, adequate water resources, and high yields from wheat and rice cropping. Because the area devoted to rice and wheat cultivation in these favourable conditions has been stagnant or declining since the 1980s, with little prospect for reversing the trend, increases in grain production must come from increases in yield per hectare. To achieve the needed increases in yields of basic food grains, a broad range of constraints facing existing production systems must be removed. Additional inputs for crop production are needed, and new technologies, which have yet to be developed, are essential for managing crop nutrients, pests and diseases.
IssueNo1
Pages439-454
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceFood Policy
VolumeNo20
PubDateOctober 1995
ISBN_ISSN 0306-9192
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Agrarian Economy and Society

  • Agriculture and Industry
  • Food Security
  • Green Revolution
  • Land Use and Tenure, Income and Equity
  • Sustainable Agriculture
  • Peasant and Informal Economies


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