In November 2017 the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) celebrated its fiftieth anniversary at its headquarters outside Palmira Colombia. As an important research center of the so-called Green Revolution in agricultural science and technologies CIAT emphasizes its contributions to sustainability food security gender equity inclusive markets and resilient climate-smart agriculture. Yet these terms hardly describe the Cauca Valley where CIAT is physically located a place that has been transformed into an industrial monoculture of sugarcane where thirteen Colombian corporations oversee the vast majority of this valley&#x2019;s famously fertile soil. This exemplifies the paradox Timothy W. Lorek describes in <i>Making the Green Revolution</i>: an international research center emphasizing small-scale and sustainable agricultural systems sited conspicuously on a landscape otherwise dominated by a large-scale corporate sugarcane industry.<br/><br/>Utilizing archives in Colombia Puerto Rico and the United States Lorek tracks the paradoxical but intertwined twentieth-century processes that produced both CIAT and sugar in the Cauca Valley. This history reveals how Colombians contributed to the rise of a global Green Revolution and how that international process in turn intersected with a complex and long-running rural conflict in Colombia.
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