"GM Food on Trial offers an excellent window on the struggles that have raged around agricultural biotech in Europe, especially how a series of potentially beneficial products were turned into symbols of global threat. As a study of how GM food evolved as a metaphor for larger questions about democratic legitimacy, the book is an important read for anyone interested in the politics of genetically modified agriculture and the democratic deficit that it has revealed. The book concisely illustrates how these conflicts have put the public accountability of representative democracy itself on trial."- Frank Fischer, Professor of Political Science, Rutgers University "In a field that is of iconic importance, both for the ways we produce food and for the ways we choose technologies, GM Food on Trial casts some much-needed (and rarely-offered) light. It takes a broad governance perspective, viewing GM foods as a range of inherently social technologies in diverse ecological and institutional settings, with crucial attention to the roles played by political discourse and the exercise of power. Whatever our preconceptions, the effect is to significantly enhance our understanding."– Professor Andrew Stirling, Science Director, Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU), University of Sussex"GM Food on Trial illustrates the extraordinarily complex twists and turns associated with the ongoing European debate over GM foods. In particular, it shows how various trials – in science, in law, and in metaphorical tests of strength among various actors – have informed and transformed the debate, often in surprising ways. Moreover, the book shows how those actors have also co-produced trials over the nature of democratic government. As two long-time observers of ongoing transformations in the agri-food system, Levidow and Carr have shed new light on what is perhaps the central issue of the European Union: What forms shall European democracy take?"– Lawrence Busch, University Distinguished Professor, Michigan State University