Abstract
This chapter explores the enduring controversy about genetically modified crops in India. It asks what role different interpretations of past agricultural development play in the construction of contested sociotechnical futures with(out) transgenic crops. The theoretical frame for this analysis combines the ‘social construction of technology’ with the concept of ‘sociotechnical imaginaries’ to understand temporal scales in the construction of such futures. Based on document analysis and semi-structured interviews, the chapter identifies four sociotechnical imaginaries in the debate. These are shaped by different interpretations of India’s agricultural past. The author argues for a greater role of temporality in studying technological controversies.
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Notes
- 1.
Genetic modification of plants is more precisely described as transgenic modification, which refers to recombinant DNA technique, i.e. inserting genes extracted from one species (e.g. a bacterium) into the DNA of a target organism (e.g. a plant) when both organisms are sexually incompatible. This intervention is done using complex laboratory techniques that allow manipulating organisms on the molecular level. Accordingly, I will use the terms ‘genetically modified’ and ‘transgenic’ interchangeably in this chapter.
- 2.
I draw on material I collected during two ethnographic visits to India from February to April 2012, and January to March 2013. My field visits were funded by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Maastricht University as part of my dissertation research which focuses on the role of publics in the Indian and European controversies about GM crops and the co-shaping of technological development and democratic politics.
- 3.
Insect-resistance traits are induced into plants with transgenes from the soil bacterium bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). If successfully modified, the plant synthesizes a protein that works as a pesticide against lepidopteran insects, such as the cotton bollworm (Bt-cotton) or the Brinjal Fruit and Shoot borer (Bt-brinjal).
- 4.
Jane Carpenter works for Croplife International a research organisation that is financed by and can be said to represent the interests of biotechnology companies in the transgenic seed sector such as BASF, Bayer CropScience, Dow AgroScience, Monsanto, and Syngenta (CropLifeInternational 2014; see also Powerbase 2014).
- 5.
The term Green Revolution refers to the period after World War II in which improved agricultural technologies, such as high yielding crop varieties, inorganic fertilizers, chemical pesticides, and mechanized irrigation systems were applied to the agricultural systems of developing countries. These innovations led to productivity increases and made some countries from net importers to net exporters of food.
- 6.
Mahyco is India’s largest seed company, having an approximated market share of 10% in crop seeds. Monsanto India Ltd, a subsidiary of Monsanto Company, USA owns 26% of Mahyco. Mahyco and Monsanto India together form the 50/50 joint venture Mahyco Monsanto Biotech. Mahyco distributes several Bt-cotton varieties and was centrally involved in the development of Bt-brinjal.
- 7.
Shiva has published on many issues of agriculture (Shiva 1991), livelihood and ecology (Shiva 1988), and on GM crops (Shiva et al. 2000). Some describe her as a “rock star of the global fight against biotechnology” (Specter 2014). While many Indian grassroots level activists question the legitimacy of her campaign as representative of India’s civil society and farming community, internationally she is often represented as “the voice leading the crusade against GMOs” (Frankman and Weinberger 2014).
- 8.
Non-target organisms are organisms in the field which do not reduce yield; they may include soil organisms, non-pest insects, birds, and other animals. Although GM crops seem to be more target-specific than conventional pesticide applications, non-target effects with ecological consequences cannot be principally ruled out.
- 9.
A notable exception here is the state of Andhra Pradesh, where non-pesticidal management has been taken up by the state government to upscale this less chemical-intensive practice of dealing with insect pests (for an analysis of how NPM addresses issues of vulnerability in the farming community, see Quartz 2011).
- 10.
TRIPS refers to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) as agreed between the member states of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) at the end of the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1994.
- 11.
Activists like Suman Sahai are however well aware of the role of the Green Revolution narrative in contributing to increased food security and India’s independence from food imports in the post-independence period.
- 12.
From this perspective, the Green Revolution acquires the meaning of having established a system of dominating land and agricultural resources to control developing countries; and GM crops are mere continuation thereof.
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List of Semi-Structured Interviews
Ganguly, B., activist Timbaktu Collective, conducted at Amritha Bhoomi, Chamaraja Nagar District, Karnataka, 14.02.2013.
Kuruganti, K., Convenor Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA), conducted in Bangalore, 16.02.2012.
Kuruganti, K., Convenor Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA), conducted in Bangalore, 08.01.2013.
Padmanaban, G., molecular scientists Indian Institute of Science, conducted in Bangalore, 19.02.2012.
Ramanjaneyulu, G. V., Executive Director Centre for Sustainable Agriculture (CSA), conducted in Hyderabad, 27.03.2012.
Rao, C. K. General Secretary Foundation for Agricultural Biotechnology and Awareness (FBAE) conducted in Bangalore, 10.01.2013.
Ravikanth, G. scientist Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment, conducted in Bangalore, 07.02.2013.
Sahai, S., Director Gene Campaign, conducted in Delhi, 28.02.2012.
Saldanha, L., Coordinator Environment Support Group (ESG), conducted in Bangalore, 20.02.2012.
Sarangi, activist Living Farms, conducted in Bhubaneswar, 17.03.2012.
Seetharama, N., Executive Director Association of Biotech-Led Enterprises (ABLE), conducted in Delhi, 28.01.2013.
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Mitzschke, A. (2019). Between Past, Present, and Future—The Temporality of Sociotechnical Futures in India’s GM Crops Debate. In: Lösch, A., Grunwald, A., Meister, M., Schulz-Schaeffer, I. (eds) Socio-Technical Futures Shaping the Present. Technikzukünfte, Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft / Futures of Technology, Science and Society. Springer VS, Wiesbaden. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-27155-8_7
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