2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2010.05.003
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Rising trends and variability of rice prices: Threats and opportunities for sub-Saharan Africa

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Cited by 141 publications
(102 citation statements)
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“…In particular, there is a widespread belief that urban consumers continue to prefer imported rice due to the inferior post-harvest grain quality of local rice which is notorious for its heterogeneous grain size composition and impurity (Seck et al, 2010; Rizzotto, in press). However, in 2007 a quality rice brand 'Rival®' (Riz de la Vallée) was introduced in the Senegal River Valley (SRV).…”
Section: Market Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, there is a widespread belief that urban consumers continue to prefer imported rice due to the inferior post-harvest grain quality of local rice which is notorious for its heterogeneous grain size composition and impurity (Seck et al, 2010; Rizzotto, in press). However, in 2007 a quality rice brand 'Rival®' (Riz de la Vallée) was introduced in the Senegal River Valley (SRV).…”
Section: Market Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the semi-arid parts of West Africa, land use changes will play a prominent role in this context. A growing population, rising food demand and previously unused potentials mean that irrigated agriculture is on the advance (Seck et al 2010). Malaria early warning systems and models will on the one hand need to be adapted to such developments, but could on the other hand provide valuable insights into epidemiological processes that may help to implement such projects in a way that negative health effects such as increasing levels of malaria transmission can be avoided.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here it is suggested that these three themes correspond to three structural limitations that have contributed to RVCs' vulnerability to economic globalization in SSA, as manifested in the difficulty of the rice sector in SSA to respond to growing internal demand for quality rice and to compete in the global market (e.g., Adjao and Staatz [47]; Demont, [31]; Demont and Ndour [1]; Seck et al [48]). …”
Section: Rice Value Chains and Economic Globalizationmentioning
confidence: 99%