| Biofuels and Rural Poverty Subjects: Environment & Agriculture; Built Environment; Global Development; Environment and Sustainability; Development Studies Environment Social Work Urban Studies; Energy; Global Development; Rural Development; Environment & the Global South; Sustainable Development; Environment & Resources; Biodiversity & Conservation; Agriculture & Environmental Sciences; Plant & Animal Ecology; Environmental Management; Sociology; Agriculture and Food; Biodiversity; Bioenergy; Energy policy and economics; Resource Management - Environmental Studies; Social Inequality; Biofuels and Rural Poverty makes an original contribution to the current controversial global debate on biofuels, in particular the consequences that large-scale production of transport fuel substitutes can have on rural areas, principally in developing countries but also in some poor rural areas of developed countries. Three key concerns are examined from a North-South perspective: ecological issues (related to land use and biodiversity), pro-poor policies (related to food and land security, gender and income generation) and equity of benefits within the global value chain. Can biofuels be pro-poor? Can smallholder farmers be equitably integrated in the biofuels global supply chain? Is the biofuels production chain detrimental to biodiversity? Most other books available on biofuels take a technical approach and are aimed at addressing energy security or climate change issues. This title focuses on the socio-economic impacts on rural people's livelihoods, offering a unique perspective on the potential role of biofuels in reducing rural poverty. Joy Clancy is Associate Professor in Technology and Development at the University of Twente, the Netherlands. She has published extensively on development, energy and poverty.nbsp; |