Protect bees in your backyard & beyond

Protect bees in your backyard & beyond

Take the pledge to protect bees in your backyard, and put your honey bee haven on the map! Pledge to do more »

Corporate bullying revealed

Corporate bullying revealed

Syngenta's multi-million dollar campaign to protect atrazine by intimidating scientists, spinning media & blocking legal action. Learn more »

Pesticides in our bodies

Pesticides in our bodies

Even in tiny doses, many chemicals can derail the delicate systems that control our development, health and reproduction. Learn more »

Let's get food & farming back on track

Let's get food & farming back on track

We need a 2013 Farm Bill that's good for farmers, communities and our future. Learn more»

EPA, step up for bees!

EPA, step up for bees!

The European Union just voted to stop using bee-harming pesticides. Tell EPA it's time to follow the science and protect bees.
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Debunking GE myths

Debunking GE myths

Dr. Marcia Ishii-Eiteman separates science from myth about genetically engineered crops. Read More »

Linda Wells's picture

Seed and chemical giant DuPont just hired a fleet of ex-police officers to patrol the farmlands of North America.

The second-largest seed company used to rely on their partner/competitor Monsanto to play the industry ‘bad cop’ when it came to seed policing. But now DuPont executives have made it clear that they are not afraid to make some enemies as they protect the company's intellectual property interests in genetically engineered seeds. And they've hired an "agro-protection" company staffed by former police officers to do it.

Pesticide Action Network's picture

Sixty-four years ago today, on a cold winter morning in Paris, delegates from around the world came together to adopt an historic document that was soon to become the foundation of international human rights law: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The UDHR has since become the most widely recognized and accepted human rights contract in history.

Adopted in 1948, the UDHR has been the foundation for an entire body of international human rights treaties, both binding and voluntary. For decades, it has inspired local and global efforts to hold human rights violators accountable — including PAN’s Permanent People’s Tribunal on violations perpetrated by the Big 6 pesticide corporations, held late last year.

Medha Chandra's picture

This week we mark the International Week of No Pesticide Use, which honors victims of pesticide poisonings across the world. A week which I wish did not need to exist.

Unfortunately, the problem is very real. According to the World Health Organization, 25 million farmworkers experience episodes of pesticide poisoning in the Global South every year. A new report by PAN Germany highlights this and other sobering facts, illustrating how pesticides continue to harm millions across the globe — and making a compelling case that it's time for real change.

Kristin Schafer's picture

On the heels of last week's strong report from pediatricians highlighting the harms pesticides can cause children's developing minds, a new study finds that pesticides are clearly harming adult brains, too.

In the "meta-analysis" published in Critical Reviews in Toxicology, scientists reviewed 14 separate studies of neurobehavioral changes linked to low-level organophosphate (OP) pesticide exposure. They found that workers exposed to OPs — particularly over long periods of time — had reduced working memory and were slower to process information.

Kristin Schafer's picture

It makes no sense. FDA's decision this week to allow continued use of the neurotoxic pesticide lindane in children's lice shampoos has me completely stumped.

The pesticide's use in pet products were withdrawn long ago. Then agricultural uses were pulled, back in 2006. Yet FDA just re-blessed the lindane products that put children most directly at risk, shampoos applied to their heads and lotions to their bodies. These products have been banned for years in dozens of countries — including by our neighbors in Mexico — and in California since 2001. What is FDA thinking??