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Wild wheat to productive drylands: Global scientific practice and the agroecological remaking of Palestine
Institution:1. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Dhaka, Bangladesh;2. International Water Management Institute (IWMI), P. O. Box 5689, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia;3. Water Futures and Solutions Initiative, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Schlossplatz 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria;4. James Hutton Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, Scotland, UK;1. Department of Human Nutritional Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada R3T 2N2;2. Canadian Centre for Agri-Food Research in Medicine, St Boniface Hospital Research Centre, Winnipeg, Canada R2H 2A6;3. Department of Physiology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada R3E 0J9;4. Manitoba Institute of Child Health, Winnipeg, Canada R3E 3P4
Abstract:This paper traces how scientific research on wheat (Triticum) worked to establish Palestine as a region sought for colonization. Recent work in geography has refined our understanding of agricultural expansion as an outcome of colonization, however, this work leaves the place-making capacity of agricultural research largely unexplored. My claim is that rather than a byproduct of colonization, wheat research served to remake Palestine as a biophysical region in need of improvement and colonization. I show how a shift in the plant sciences from research in taxonomy to plant breeding corresponded to an agro-climatic shift on Palestine from an undesirable, arid region to a promising dryland agricultural region. In this way, wheat research drew Palestine and the United States into a wider effort to transform arid areas into agricultural drylands. Drawing on a previously unexplored episode of technical cooperation between researchers in the United States and Palestine, I argue that we must examine how wildness, native-ness, and agro-climatic suitability are scientifically constituted within and not apart from colonial conquest. In doing so, the paper calls for reconsideration within geography and political ecology of the place-making relationship between colonization and scientific practice.
Keywords:Agro-climatology  Agro-ecology  Colonization  Palestine  United States  Drylands
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