Rice Facts

  • Where now for the global rice market?
    What do the coming years hold for the world’s most important grain?
    By Mahabub Hossain, Executive director, Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee
  • Of rice and rats
    Rats and mice do untold damage to rice crops and stocks across the globe. Here, Rice Today presents the facts on the rodent scourge.
    By Grant Singleton, rodent expert and coordinator of the Irrigated Rice Research Consortium
  • A balancing act
    How do we produce enough food to feed a growing population in the face of declining growth in cereal yields?
    By Mahabub Hossain, Head, Social Sciences Division at IRRI
  • Considering gender
    As men’s and women’s roles change, how should we address gender issues in rice-based agriculture
    by Thelma Paris, senior scientist (socioeconomist and gender specialist), Social Sciences Division, IRRI
  • Rice in Africa
    Can rice help reduce hunger and poverty in sub-Saharan Africa?
    by Mahabub Hossain, Head, Social Sciences Division at IRRI
  • Saving labor
    Boosting labor productivity on rice farms raises living standards, even for landless workers
    by David Dawe, Economist
  • Rice to the tiller
    Lower prices can put more rice in the bowls of the landless rural poor — the forgotten, anonymous and voiceless underclass that provides most of the labor to grow it
    by David Dawe, Economist
  • Trading up
    A fresh look at the world's rice market for Asians who still equate food security with self-sufficiency
    by David Dawe, Economist
  • The monoculture myth
    The Green Revolution neither monopolized farmers' fields nor impoverished nutrition
    by David Dawe, Economist
  • Essential food for the poor
    Rice growers and consumer constitute the bulk of the world's population that still lives in poverty
    by David Dawe, Economist  
     

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April-June 2008
Vol. 7 No. 2

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Rice Today cover inspires musician

Jay Maclean, a freelance writer, information specialist, and musician, was struck by the cover photo in the April-June 2007 issue of Rice Today, which depicts the Mekong River as it winds through northwestern Yunnan Province in China. He writes: “I was sitting at my piano, looking at the cover, seeing the rugged landscape rolling down onto a narrow river, a temple, shoals and mud, nevertheless the same river that later calms down on its voyage through Cambodia and beyond. So, I began to play an impression of the scene. It came together quite quickly and after an hour I had a piece that runs for nearly 4-1/2 minutes. I added a bass line and some percussion to enhance the mood.” He calls it, naturally, River of Rice (© Jay Maclean 2007). Click here to listen.