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...one’s asking me why I am doing [the work that I am doing,” Wheat said...

Author: By Eric P. Newcomer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Hammonds Speaks on Diversity Panel | 4/9/2010 | See Source »

Besides Hammonds, who is also a professor of History of Science and of African American Studies, two other panelists participated—Brandon M. Terry ’05, a fourth year doctoral student in political science and African American studies at Yale; and Christopher Wheat, an assistant professor of technological innovation, entrepreneurship, and strategic management at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...

Author: By Eric P. Newcomer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Hammonds Speaks on Diversity Panel | 4/9/2010 | See Source »

...about 145 kg) per hectare (about 2.5 acres) - more than three times the yield from cannabis grown in Morocco, another big hash producer. "Afghanistan is using some of its best land to grow cannabis," says Antonia Maria Costa, director of the U.N. drug office in Vienna. "If they grew wheat instead, insurgents would not have money to buy weapons and the international community would not have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on food aid." (See pictures of cannabis culture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Afghanistan's New Bumper Drug Crop: Cannabis | 4/1/2010 | See Source »

That might be true. But the U.N.'s findings show how daunting a task it is for Afghan and NATO officials to persuade thousands of farmers to switch from growing drugs to growing food. Farmers can earn about three times as much money growing cannabis as growing wheat: about $3,900 per hectare, compared with $1,200 per hectare. What's more, cannabis is even more lucrative to grow than opium poppies, which yield about $3,600 per hectare. It's also far cheaper to grow cannabis than poppies, requiring little sophisticated cultivation. The report says it is an almost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Afghanistan's New Bumper Drug Crop: Cannabis | 4/1/2010 | See Source »

...plenty of them. It was two weeks before the harvest, and the last blossoms were floating away in the dusty haze of Helmand province, leaving the prohibitively weird-looking, blue-gray bulbs bald and ready for processing, like an army of alien vegetative creatures. We landed in a wheat field just across the road from the district governor's pathetic headquarters. It was Day 45 after the operation to retrieve Marjah from the Taliban had begun, and the highest-ranking U.S. military official, Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was paying a congratulatory visit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Harvesting Democracy in Afghanistan | 3/31/2010 | See Source »

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