Andrea Noelani Brower is an activist-scholar from Kaua'i. Her scholarship is rooted in collective movements for justice, equality, liberation, and ecological regeneration. She teaches in sociology, environmental studies, and leadership studies at Gonzaga University.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction: Contested Futures 1. The Agrochemical-Seed-Biotech Oligopoly 2. Science and Regulation in Service of Capital 3. "GMO Ground Zero" 4. Imperialism and the Making of a Plantation Economy 5. From Sugar to Monsanto 6. The State's Redistribution of Collective Wealth 7. Resistance Is Fertile 8. Battling Monsanto in an Era of Neoliberal Cynicism 9. Seeds of Possibility Bibliography Index
Where this book differs from other academic studies about power in Hawai?i is in its steadfast commitment to demonstrating the power of intersectional resistance. Brower's interest in capitalism and agrochemical agriculture's colonization of food production is not only to expose the dangers to human and nonhuman life but also to demonstrate how a resistance that spans ethnicities, classes, genders, and other distinct interest groups derives power from coalition instead of division. This book is a timely examination of Hawai?i's struggles over land and power."-Kathryn Besio, University of Hawai?i at Hilo "This book is a powerful intervention of truth and transparency into corporate darkness and influence. It explodes the myth of benevolence and the drive to feed the world in the agricultural biotechnology industry. What might seem like battles on the edge of the empire in places like Hawai?i can actually be seen as central sites of leadership, resistance, and innovation in grappling against global structures and power. Hawai?i's place as the epicenter for a global battle over our future-the future of our food systems, the impacts of pesticides and herbicides on human health and environment, and the need for courageous actors-is made clear by this work. We need this book."-Kamana Beamer, University of Hawai?i at Manoa

