The technopolitics of agronomic knowledge and tropical(izing) vegetables in Brazil.

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    • Abstract:
      This article critically analyzes the social and political factors behind the advancement of technoscientific development in modern Brazilian agriculture. In the second half of the 20th century, Brazil underwent a rapid industrialization in the agricultural sector by more than doubling productivity in key global commodities and a widespread migration of people from rural to urban areas. Most observers point to the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) as the technological engine that drove the industrialization of Brazilian agriculture. Existing approaches to analyze technoscientific development tend to overlook the role of the environment and individual scientists in enacting change. I argue that, especially in the case of agriculture, technoscientific development hinges on the extent to which the environment is disregarded or embraced by those who have the institutional support and capacity to innovate. To support my argument, I draw on two contrasting cases of crop development spearheaded by Embrapa scientists: the tropicalization of the carrot and participatory research on non-conventional vegetables. Through those two cases, the article demonstrates how the general and specific, the transnational and local, and the industrial and agroecological are all key contrasting factors for understanding technoscientific development in agriculture. This research is based on extensive interviews and participant observation at Embrapa's vegetable research center near Brasilia, Brazil. [Display omitted] • Focuses on the case of Embrapa as an emblematic example of tropical agricultural research. • Draws on interviews and participant observation at the Embrapa Vegetables research center and with local producers. • Analyzes the role of scientists, the state and the environment in shaping agricultural research agendas. • Contrasts two cases of agricultural research in Brazil: the carrot and underutilized vegetable crops. • Demonstrates how public agricultural research shapes the long-term development of food systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
    • Abstract:
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