|
|
Are Western experts development tourists? Two books this month show how
poor world farmers are hindered by the West. And we review two do-it-yourself printing
manuals.
Editor: Anuradha Vittachi
|
The Poverty Brokers
Rural Development: Putting the Last First
by Robert Chambers

Longman (pbk) £2.00

The Law of the Seed: Another Development
and Plant Genetic Resources

by Pay Roy Mooney
Development Dialogue
1983: 1-2, Dag Hammarskjold Foundation,

Ovre, Slottsgatan 2, Uppsala, Sweden.

Development - is it for us or against us? The Brazilian peasant who asked the question
was way ahead of many development experts in seeing that development, rather
than overcoming poverty, can create it.
In his highly readable and example-packed book, Rural Development: Putting the Last First, Robert Chambers tells us that
one of the main reasons for this is the arrogance of ignorant educated
outsiders. Such Western-trained experts (development tourists) fail to
see the true dimensions of rural poverty and cannot allow themselves to recognise that
their own prosperity may have something to do with it.
The solutions which slip glibly off the polished tongues of
(these) practised non-thinkers avoid the hard realities of power structures. Nor do
outside experts, snug in their ethnocentric cocoons, take into account the vast
store of indigenous knowledge. Not surprisingly, the perceptions and priorities of the
rich, even when well-meaning, are often irrelevant to the poor.
Chambers would reverse the emphasis of development efforts: from big to
small, from near to remote, from external to indigenous, from strong to weak, from
teaching to learning. Its a stimulating handbook for all development workers, even
though he ignores the one major example of a country whose development was based on
putting the last first - Maoist China.
It is disappointing, too, that he does not deal with those outside
forces maintaining and profiting from the system within which peasants have to operate.
TNCs, for example, can - and
do - warp whole economies,
directing development against the interests of the countrys peoples and leaving them
little room to manoeuvre. To get to the roots of underdevelopment we have to study not
only the poor but the powerful, who control the system which creates poverty.
In the latest issue of the twice-yearly journal Development
Dialogue, which is concerned with the pillage of the Third
Worlds genetic resources, Pat Mooney illustrates the importance of this approach.
The South has most of the plants from which our major food crops have been developed. Most
of the plant breeders are in the North. The genetic resources of the South are being
converted into enormous profits by TNCs which develop and patent new seed varieties whose
use in the South is frequently a condition for development assistance.
The introduction of these new varieties leads to the elimination of
older, more robust, varieties with their vital germplasm. We are now in danger of losing
the genetic raw material on which all cultivated crops depend. Moreover, blanket planting
of narrowly based varieties increases the risks of crop wipeout.
Companies like Royal Dutch Shell, Ciba-Geigy and Sandoz increasingly
control the supply of seeds. And the seed companies are increasingly inseparable from the
chemical companies which control pesticides and fertilisers. This is a dangerous
interlocking of interests in such an important field; interests moreover, which have clout
in UN and international regulatory bodies.
Mooney unravels both the complicated and unsavoury history of corporate
attempts to monopolise seeds through Plant Breeders Rights (PBR), and the failure of
moves to control the seed industry. The message is clear: most regulations are directed
against the small farmer, against the needs of the Third World and, ultimately, against
the needs of us all.
Genetic engineering can seem a long way from the struggles of
peasant farmers to find food and justice. But germplasm is the vital first link in
the food chain. He concludes:
There can be no true land reform - no agrarian justice of any kind - and certainly no national
self-reliance, if our needs are subject to exclusive monopoly patents and our plants are
bred as part of a high-input chemicals package in genetically uniform and vulnerable
crops.
Or, as Third World leaders have put it: Give us this day our
daily bread must not become a prayer to Shell Oil.
Anne Buchanan

Getting your hands inky
The Sten-screen
by Ian McLaren

IT Publications, 9 King St, London WC2E 8HN, UK (pbk) £1.95

Low Cost Printing for Development
by Jonathan Zeitlyn

Available from 51 Chetwynd Rd, London NW5 (pbk)
£4.00 per set ± 45p postage surface mail

If a Third World group could produce its own printed materials, and in
small quantities while keeping its printing costs rock-bottom low, it could avert two
dangers. The first and fairly obvious danger is the dependence on expensive Western
technology. The second and more insidious danger is the dependence on someone elses
ideas about what the materials should be saying. A community health centre in the
developing world can distribute health education materials produced in the West - but these materials may be slightly
off-target; and even if not, they still perpetuate a gift relationship with
the local group as grateful recipients. Producing a local health cation pack
could empower the community as well as providing uniquely tailored information - written in the local dialect, using a
picture/text ratio that suits the local literacy level, suggesting recipes using local
foods, and so on.
Ian McLaren has produced a manual on how to make and use a low cost
printing process called The Sten-screen. He is a graphic designer (it shows in the clean, sharp illustrations) whose work
on the stenscreen was funded by Intermediate Technology Industrial Services. The
sten-screen requires no electricity and can be made From locally available materials. The
16-page manual is thorough and detailed.
A rather more ambitious attack on the problem of printing in the
developing world comes from Jonathan Zeitlyn in his four-part manual, Low Cost Printing for Development. Each part is
around 30 pages long, and is brimming with ideas. He whistles through the mechanics of
do-ityourself printing in Part Two - describing everything from Hecto jelly pads to photo stencils.
But the manual also tells you much more.
In Part One, Zeitlyn explains how to plan a publishing operation from
scratch; how to design pages and create headlines; he reminds you to check your
illustrations to make sure theyre understood correctly, to use lightweight paper if
youre going to post the end-product. He signals all the major pitfalls.
In Part Three, Using a Printer, he sails into deeper waters.
Here Zeitlyn tells you what to expect if you deal with a professional printer, and later
how to use a printing machine yourself. The fourth and final part describes setting up and
running your own printshop - and
how to make a fifth section yourself.
Zeitlyn writes with infectious enthusiasm. The pages bloom with
pictures and the text is lively and approachable. Interestingly, the manual is printed in
India, with a small printrun. Zeitlyn is planning a second edition - comments from readers of the first edition will, he says, be
welcome.
Tara de Silva
|