Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Dinner at the New Gene Café

How Genetic Engineering Is Changing What We Eat, How We Live, and the Global Politics of Food

Parameters

  • 400 pages
  • 14 hours of reading

More about the book

The definitive book on the rise of biotechnology and genetic modification in the world's food supply, a growing topic of fierce international debate.Biotech companies are racing to alter the genetic building blocks of the world's food. In the United States, the primary venue for this quiet revolution, the acreage of genetically modified crops has soared from zero to 70 million acres since 1996. More than half of America's processed grocery products-from cornflakes to granola bars to diet drinks-contain gene-altered ingredients. But the U.S., unlike Europe and other democratic nations, does not require labeling of modified food. Dinner at the New Gene Caf� expertly lays out the battle lines of the impending collision between a powerful but unproved technology and a gathering resistance from people worried about the safety of genetic change.Should be required reading for anyone who eats --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Book purchase

Dinner at the New Gene Café, Bill Lambrecht

Language
Released
2002
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Very Good
Price
€3.99

Payment methods

No one has rated yet.Add rating

Title
Dinner at the New Gene Café
Subtitle
How Genetic Engineering Is Changing What We Eat, How We Live, and the Global Politics of Food
Language
English
Released
2002
Format
Paperback
Pages
400
ISBN10
0312302630
ISBN13
9780312302634
Series
Description
The definitive book on the rise of biotechnology and genetic modification in the world's food supply, a growing topic of fierce international debate.Biotech companies are racing to alter the genetic building blocks of the world's food. In the United States, the primary venue for this quiet revolution, the acreage of genetically modified crops has soared from zero to 70 million acres since 1996. More than half of America's processed grocery products-from cornflakes to granola bars to diet drinks-contain gene-altered ingredients. But the U.S., unlike Europe and other democratic nations, does not require labeling of modified food. Dinner at the New Gene Caf� expertly lays out the battle lines of the impending collision between a powerful but unproved technology and a gathering resistance from people worried about the safety of genetic change.Should be required reading for anyone who eats --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)