Difference between revisions of "Famine" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
  
A '''famine''' is a phenomenon in which a large percentage of the population of a region or country is so undernourished that death by [[starvation]] or other related diseases becomes increasingly common.
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A '''famine''' is a phenomenon in which a large percentage of the population of a region or country is so undernourished that [[death]] by [[starvation]] or other related [[disease]]s becomes increasingly common. Famine is associated both with natural causes, such as [[agriculture|crop]] failure and [[pestilence]], and artificial or man-made causes including [[war]] and [[genocide]].  
In spite of the much greater technological and economic resources of the modern world, famine still strikes many parts of the world, mostly in the [[developing nations]].
 
Famine is associated with naturally-occurring [[agriculture|crop]] failure and [[pestilence]] and artificially with [[war]] and [[genocide]].  In the past few decades, a more nuanced view focused on the economic and political circumstances leading to modern famine has emerged. Modern relief agencies categorize various gradations of famine according to a [[famine scale]].
 
  
Many areas that suffered famines in the past have protected themselves through technological and social development. The first area in Europe to eliminate famine was the [[Netherlands]], which saw its last peacetime famines in the early-[[17th century]] as it became a major economic power and established a complex political organization. A prominent economist on the subject, [[Nobel laureate]] [[Amartya Sen]], has noted that no functioning [[democracy]] has ever suffered a famine.
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Many areas that suffered famines in the past have protected themselves through [[technology|technological]] and [[society|social]] development. In spite of the much greater technological and economic resources of the modern world, however, famine still strikes many parts of the world, mostly in the [[developing country|developing nations]]. A prominent [[economics|economist]] on the subject, [[Nobel laureate]] [[Amartya Sen]], has noted that no functioning [[democracy]] has ever suffered a famine.  
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In contemporary times, both [[government]]s and [[non-governmental organization]]s are active in delivering [[humanitarian aid]] to places where famine strikes. However, resources are often limited, and the cause of the famine itself may add to the difficulty of distributing food effectively. While some have suggested that population growth be curbed since food resources are finite and will become inadequate to ensure food security for all if the number of people in the world increases much more, others recognize that the threat of famine lies more in distribution and production than the potential for food in the world. The solution to famine, therefore, can be seen to lie in a change in human nature, rather than in external factors. Were everyone concerned for the health and well-being of all people throughout the world, with such an attitude and awareness people would find a way to produce and distribute sufficient food supplies and so avoid the suffering of famine.
  
== Causes of Famine ==
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==Characteristics and effects==
Famine can be defined as the “catastrophic disruption of the social, economic and institutional systems that provide for food production, distribution, and consumption.”.  Famines kill not just masses of people, they also destroy livestock which people depend on as food and for their livelihood. 
 
  
The devastations brought on by famines are not accountable to merely one single event in a region.  Rather, famines are brought on by an accumulation of events and policies that carry both “natural” and “artificial” characteristics.  [[Floods]], [[droughts]], [[volcanic eruptions]], [[earthquakes]] and other such disasters are part of the “natural” causes which are out of human control and oftentimes can lead to famines.  On the other hand, [[wars]], [[civil strife]], government’s poor management of resources and other similar events are viewed as the “artificial” causes which may also aid towards developing famine within a region.  These events, both natural and artificial, do not generally work in isolation of one another.  It is the combination of these causes which overtime, progressively erodes the capacity of countries and regions to deal with what could otherwise be "short-term shocks" to the land and its economy.
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Famine can be defined as the catastrophic disruption of the social, economic, and institutional systems that provide for food production, distribution, and consumption. Famines not only kill masses of people, they also destroy [[livestock]], which people depend upon as food and for their livelihood, extending the impact.
  
It is well known that there is a particularly strong relationship between [[droughts]], the subsequent demise of [[agriculture]] and famines. Droughts in many well-developed countries do not contribute to famines.  However, a drought coupled with most [[third world ]]problems of over populated areas, the already existing inability to feed masses of people and poor healthcare facilities provided by governments, easily tips the scales towards the mass devastations which result from famines in many developing countries.  Many countries that face famines tend to follow the trend of having poor healthcare and [[sanitation]] facilities for their people.  Poor management of such government resources brings about additional problems of diseases such as [[meningitis]], [[malaria]] and [[cholera]].  Under nourished people are naturally more susceptible to these diseases and thus, this only adds to the many factors which cause death and dismay in famine stricken regions.        
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Famines also have a very strong impact on [[demographics]]. Mortality is concentrated among children and the elderly. A consistent demographic fact is that in all recorded famines, male mortality exceeds female. Possible reasons for this include greater female resilience under the pressure of malnutrition, and that women are more skilled at gathering and processing wild foods and other fall-back famine foods. Famines therefore leave the reproductive core of a population—adult women—less affected compared to other population categories, and post-famine periods are often characterized a "rebound" with increased births. Even though famines reduce the size of the population significantly, in fact even the most severe famines have rarely dented population growth for more than a few years. The mortality in [[China]] in 1958–1961, [[Bengal]] in 1943, and [[Ethiopia]] in 1983–1985 was all made up by a growing population in just a few years. Of greater long-term demographic impact is emigration: [[Ireland]] was chiefly depopulated after the famine of the 1940s by waves of emigration.
  
Famines also have a very strong impact on [[demographics]]. It has been observed that periods of extensive famine can lead to a reduction in the number of reported female children in some cultures. Demographers and historians have debated the causes of this trend and some believe that parents deliberately select male children, through the process of [[infanticide]], as they are perceived as being more valuable to society. Others believe that biological processes may be at work.  
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It has been observed that periods of extensive famine can lead to a reduction in the number of reported female children in some cultures. Demographers and historians have debated the causes of this trend and some believe that parents deliberately select male children, through the process of [[infanticide]], as they are perceived as being more valuable to society. Others have suggested that biological processes may be at work.  
  
While famines may appear to be similar across the globe, the policies from which they may attain relief differ immensely according to their governments, regions and the intensity and length of the famines.  One “optimal solution” cannot be identified as the main means to cure the region that is affected.  It can be said that there is a “triangular relationship” between famines, economic/natural disasters or “natural” and artificial” causes and the actions of political regimes.
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== Causes ==
  
== Historical Famine by Region ==
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In [[biology|biological]] terms, a population beyond its regional carrying capacity causes famine. While the operative cause of famine is an imbalance of population with respect to [[food]] supply, the actual extent of famines depend on a combination of [[politics|political]], [[economics|economic]], and biological factors. Famines can be exacerbated by poor governance or inadequate logistics for food distribution. In some modern cases, it is political strife, [[poverty]], and violence that disrupts the [[agriculture|agricultural]] and food distribution processes.
=== Famine in Africa ===
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The devastations brought on by famines are not accountable to one single event in a region. Rather, famines are brought on by an accumulation of events and policies that carry both “natural” and “artificial” characteristics. [[Flood]]s, [[drought]]s, [[volcano|volcanic eruptions]], [[earthquake]]s, and other such disasters are part of the “natural” causes which are out of human control and oftentimes can lead to famines. On the other hand, [[war]]s, [[civil strife]], government’s poor management of resources, and other similar events are viewed as the “artificial” causes which may also aid towards developing famine within a region. These events, both natural and artificial, do not generally work in isolation from one another. It is the combination of these causes which, over time, progressively erodes the capacity of countries and regions to deal with what could otherwise be "short-term shocks" to the land and its [[economy]].
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There is a particularly strong relationship between droughts, the subsequent demise of [[agriculture]], and famines. However, droughts in many well-developed countries do not contribute to famines. On the other hand, a drought coupled with over populated areas, already existing inability to feed masses of people, and poor [[healthcare]] facilities easily tips the scales towards the mass devastations which result from famines in many developing countries. Poor healthcare and [[sanitation]] facilities brings about additional problems of [[disease]]s such as [[meningitis]], [[malaria]], and [[cholera]]. Under-nourished people are naturally more susceptible to these diseases and this only adds to the many factors which cause death and suffering in famine stricken regions.
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While famines may appear to be similar across the globe, the policies from which they may attain relief differ immensely according to their governments, regions and the intensity and length of the famines. One “optimal solution” cannot be identified as the main means to cure the region that is affected.
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== Historical famines by region ==
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=== Africa ===
 
[[Image:Somali children waiting.JPEG|left|thumb|250 px|Somalians sit in the sun as they wait for food provided during Operation Provide Relief, Somalia, in 1992.]]  
 
[[Image:Somali children waiting.JPEG|left|thumb|250 px|Somalians sit in the sun as they wait for food provided during Operation Provide Relief, Somalia, in 1992.]]  
Famine has been widespread in many African countries as they are generally not self-sufficient in food production or relying on income from cash crops to import food. Agriculture in [[Africa]] is greatly susceptible to climatic fluctuations, especially droughts which reduces the amount of food produced locally.  Other agricultural problems faced by many parts of the country include [[soil infertility]], [[land degradation]] and [[erosion]], swarms of [[desert locusts]] which often destroy whole crops and [[livestock]].
 
  
Other factors contributing to the tenuous food security situation in Africa include, political instability, [[civil war]] and armed conflict, corruption and mismanagement in handling food supplies and trade policies that harm African agriculture. Sudden increases in food prices are an example of mismanaged government policies which play a major factor in contributing to extreme famines on the continent.  Famines that occurred in [[Ethiopia]] in the 1980s and in [[Sudan]] in the 1990s, both experienced huge increases in food prices which contributed to their intensity. Famines on the African continent in areas such as [[Ethiopia]], [[Sudan]] and [[Somalia]] have unfortunately had a tendency to reoccur.  These regions have faced famines on and off from the 1970s through to the 1990s.
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Famines have been reported in various parts of Africa throughout history. In the mid-twenty-second century B.C.E., a sudden and short-lived climatic change that caused reduced rainfall resulted in several decades of drought in [[Upper Egypt]]. The resulting famine and civil strife is believed to have been a major cause of the collapse of the [[Old Kingdom]]. In the 1680s, famine extended across the entire [[Sahel]], and in 1738 half the population of [[Timbuktu]] died of famine (Milich 1997).
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Historians of African famine have documented repeated famines in [[Ethiopia]]. Possibly the worst episode occurred in 1888 and succeeding years, as the epizootic [[rinderpest]], introduced into [[Eritrea]] by infected cattle, spread southwards reaching ultimately as far as [[South Africa]]. In Ethiopia it was estimated that as much as 90 percent of the national herd died, rendering rich farmers and herders destitute overnight. This coincided with [[drought]] associated with an [[el Nino]] oscillation, human epidemics of [[smallpox]], and in several countries, intense [[war]]. The great famine that afflicted Ethiopia from 1888 to 1892 cost it roughly one-third of its population (Wolde-Georgis 1997).  
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In the first half of the twentieth century, apart from a few notable counter-examples such as the famine in [[Rwanda]] during [[World War II]] and the [[Malawi]] famine of 1949, most famines were localized and brief food shortages. The specter of famine recurred only in the early 1970s, when [[Ethiopia]] and the west African [[Sahel]] suffered drought and famine. The Ethiopian famine of that time was closely linked to the crisis of [[feudalism]] in that country, and in due course helped to bring about the downfall of the Emperor [[Haile Selassie]]. The Sahelian famine was associated with the slowly growing crisis of [[pastoralism]] in Africa, which has seen livestock herding decline as a viable way of life.
  
Today these and other regions of Africa are still not famine free. May people in mostly [[rural areas]] of the country suffer from [[malnutrition]] and disease due to lack of food, poverty and poor agricultural development.  [[AIDS]] and [[HIV]] are also contributing to long-term economic effects on agriculture by reducing the available workforce. Another major contributor to many reoccurring famines in Africa has been the acute political instability in numerous parts of the country. Political instability being a driving force of famines was seen in the famine of [[Karamoja]], [[Uganda]] in 1980. This famine carries one of the worst mortality rates which has been recently recorded21% of the population of Karamoja died including 60% of infants.
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Since then, African famines became more frequent, more widespread and more severe. Many African countries are not self-sufficient in food production, relying on income from [[cash crop]]s to import food. [[Agriculture]] in Africa is susceptible to [[climate|climatic]] fluctuations, especially [[drought]]s which can reduce the amount of food produced locally. Other agricultural problems include [[fertility (soil)|soil infertility]], [[land degradation]] and [[erosion]], and swarms of [[desert locust]]s which can destroy whole crops and livestock diseases. The most serious famines have been caused by a combination of drought, misguided economic policies, and conflict. Political instability was a driving force in the famine of [[Karamoja]], [[Uganda]] in 1980. This famine carries one of the worst mortality rates which has been recently recorded: 21 percent of the population of Karamoja died, including 60 percent of infants. [[AIDS]] is also having long-term economic effects on agriculture by reducing the available workforce, and is creating new vulnerabilities to famine by overburdening poor households.  
  
=== Famine in Asia ===
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=== Asia ===
 
====China====
 
====China====
[[Image:Engraving-FamineRelief-China.gif|thumb|left|250px|Chinese officials engaged in famine relief, 19th C. engraving]]
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Chinese scholars kept count of 1,828 rampages by the famine since 108 B.C.E. to 1911 in one province or another—an average of close to one famine per year (Mallory 1926). From 1333 to 1337 a terrible famine killed six million Chinese. The four famines of 1810, 1811, 1846, and 1849 are said to have killed not less than 45 million people (Ferreyra 2004). China's [[Qing Dynasty]] [[bureaucracy]], which devoted extensive attention to minimizing famines, is credited with averting a series of famines following [[ENSO|El Niño-Southern Oscillation]]-linked droughts and floods. These events are comparable, though somewhat smaller in scale, to the ecological trigger events of China's vast nineteenth century famines (Will 1990). Qing China carried out its relief efforts, which included vast shipments of food, a requirement that the rich open their storehouses to the poor, and price regulation, as part of a state guarantee of subsistence to the [[peasant]]ry (known as ''ming-sheng'').
China's history has experienced a few famines in the 19th Century.  The shifts from monarchical rule to communist state rulings lead to an initial breakdown in the system of grain shipment and other foods and agricultural management. The famine under the [[Tongzhi Restoration]] between 1867 and 1868 was relatively short lived and successfully relieved.  A subsequent famine occurred between 1877 to 1878.  This was brought on mainly by drought across northern China. The province of [[Shanxi]] was strongly affected, as there were reports of massive depopulation due to grains running out.  Desperate starving people stripped forests, fields, and even their very houses for food. The estimate mortality rate of this famine was between 9.5 to 13 million people.
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[[Image:Engraving-FamineRelief-China.gif|thumb|left|250px|Chinese officials engaged in famine relief, nineteenth century engraving]]
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When a stressed monarchy shifted from state management and direct shipments of grain to monetary charity in the mid-nineteenth century, the system broke down. Thus the 1867–1868 famine under the [[Tongzhi Restoration]] was successfully relieved but the [[Great North China Famine]] of 1877–1878 , caused by drought across northern China, was a vast catastrophe. The province of [[Shanxi]] was substantially depopulated as grains ran out, and desperately starving people stripped forests, fields, and their very houses for food. Estimated mortality is 9.5 to 13 million people (Davis 2001).
  
Despite the tragedies of these famines no other famine has the reputation of being as great and devastating as the famine between 1958 to 1961.  Known by many names, the [[“Great Leap Famine”]], the [[“Three Terrible Years”]], this was not just the worst that China ever faced, but also the worst famine ever in human history.  This began with [[Mao Zedong]] and the [[Communist Party’s]] decision to launch the [[“Great Leap Forward”]].  This was an initiative to accomplish in China economic advances in just a few years what otherwise took other nations decades to achieve. Steel production along with Mao’s belief in [[Stalin’s]] collectivization of farming and food and production quota controls, became the order which the Chinese population had no choice but to follow. Although drought did come into play, the Communist’s agricultural policies enforced the largely man-made famine.
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The largest famine of the twentieth century, and almost certainly of all time, was the 1958–1961 [[Great Leap Forward]] famine. The immediate causes of this famine lay in Chairman [[Mao Zedong]]'s ill-fated attempt to transform China from an agricultural nation. Communist Party cadres across China insisted that peasants abandon their farms for collective farms, and begin to produce [[steel]] in small [[foundry|foundries]], often melting down their farm instruments in the process. [[Collectivization]] undermined incentives for the investment of labor and resources in agriculture; unrealistic plans for decentralized metal production sapped needed labor; unfavorable weather conditions; and communal dining halls encouraged overconsumption of available food (Chang and Wen 1997). Such was the centralized control of information and the intense pressure on party cadres to report only good news—such as production quotas met or exceeded—that information about the escalating disaster was effectively suppressed. When the leadership did become aware of the scale of the famine, it did little to respond.
  
The [[“Three Terrible Years”]] strictly prohibited all private farming.  The state dictated the methods of farming which peasants and others were forced to carryout in large collective farms.  These agricultural and farming methods where drawn form pseudoscience which where known to have failed drastically with countries that had practiced them in the past.  People who opposed the farming methods where viewed and persecuted as [[“rightist”]].  Unlike famines which tend to be localized and only affect a particular region, this famine struck the entire country.  It is estimated between 30 to 40 million people died and due to the Chinese culture placing a low value on daughters, as many as a quarter who perished were young girls.  Leading [[demographers]] found that during the famine, villages that experienced the worst starvation showed an unusually high rate of mental impairment among adults which were born during the famine.  
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The 1958–1961 famine is estimated to have caused excess mortality of about 30 million. It was only when the famine had wrought its worst that [[Mao Zedong|Mao]] reversed the agricultural collectivization policies, which were effectively dismantled in 1978. China has not experienced a major famine since 1961 (Woo-Cummings, 2002).
  
The [[“Great Leap Famine”]] came to an end with the abandonment of Mao’s policies. However, the [[“Cultural Revolution”]] which Mao later launched, lead to the killing of many of those who took the stand to abandon Mao’s [[“Great Leap Forward”]] policies.  China has since faced droughts, floods and other natural disasters.  However, it had never since experienced a famine which is even remotely comparable to the that of the famine between 1958 to 1961.
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====India====
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Owing to its almost entire dependence upon the [[monsoon]] rains, [[India]] is liable to crop failures, which upon occasion deepen into famine. There were 14 famines in [[History of India|India]] between the eleventh and seventeenth centuries (Bhatia, 1985). For example, during the 1022-1033 famines entire provinces were depopulated. Famine in [[Deccan]] killed at least 2 million people in 1702-1704. There were approximately 25 major famines spread through states such as [[Tamil Nadu]] in the south, and [[Bihar]] and [[Bengal]] in the east during the latter half of the nineteenth century.
  
====India====
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Famines were a product of both natural causes such as uneven rainfall, and man-made causes brought on by British economic and administrative policies throughout the region. Since 1857, British administrative policies in India led to the seizure and conversion of local farmland to foreign-owned plantations, restrictions on internal trade, heavy taxation of Indian citizens to support unsuccessful British expeditions in [[Afghanistan]], inflationary measures that increased the price of food and substantial exports of staple crops from India to Britain. Observations by the Famine Commission of 1880 supported the notion that food distribution was more to blame for famines than food scarcity. They observed that each province in British India, including [[Burma]], had a surplus of food grains, and the annual surplus was 5.16 million tons. British citizens, such as [[William Digby]], agitated for policy reforms and famine relief, but the governing [[British Viceroy]] of the time, [[Lord Lytton]], opposed such changes with the belief that they would stimulate shirking by Indian workers.  
There were a number of famines in [[India]] between the 11th and 17th centuries.  The earlier famines were localized, and it was only after 1860, during the [[British]] rule in India, that famine came to signify a general shortage of food grains in the country.  The [[Bengal]] famine of 1770, is estimated to have taken close to 10 million lives.  That was nearly one-third of Bengal's population at the time.  Famines were a product of both natural causes such as uneven rainfall, and man made causes brought on by British economic and administrative policies through out the region. Since 1857, British administrative policies in India led to the seizure and conversion of local farmland to foreign-owned plantations, restrictions on internal trade, heavy taxation of Indian citizens to support unsuccessful British expeditions in [[Afghanistan]], inflationary measures that increased the price of food and substantial exports of staple crops from India to Britain. Observations by the "Famine Commission" of 1880 supported the notion that food distribution was more to blame for famines than food scarcity. They observed that each province in British India, including [[Burma]], had a surplus of food grains, and the annual surplus was 5.16 million tons. British citizens, such as [[William Digby]], agitated for policy reforms and famine relief, but the governing [[British Viceroy]] of the time, [[Lord Lytton]], opposed such changes with the belief that they would stimulate shirking by Indian workers.
 
  
Famines continued to persist in [[Colonial]] India until independence was gained in 1947. The last major famine to afflict India before its independence, was again mainly in the region of Bengal between 1943 to 1944. This killed 3 million to 4 million people. Since India’s independence, the country has never faced another major famine. The closest India has come to a famine was in 1966, in the region of [[Bihar]]. This poor food situation was however, alleviated before it reached the stages of a famine with aid from the [[United States]] when it allocated 900,000 tons of grain.
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Famines continued to persist in [[Colonial India]] until independence was gained in 1947. The last major famine to afflict India before its independence, was again mainly in the region of Bengal between 1943 to 1944. This killed three million to four million people. Since India’s independence, the country has never faced another major famine. The closest India has come to a famine was in 1966, in the region of [[Bihar]]. This situation was, however, alleviated before it reached the stages of a famine when the [[United States]] allocated 900,000 tons of grain in [[humanitarian aid|aid]] to the stricken area.
  
 
====North Korea====
 
====North Korea====
Over the past 50 years, North Korea has tried to maintain a policy of self reliance or “[[Juche]]”.  In prior decades, it had achieved moderate self sufficiency through massive [[industrialization]] of agriculture.  However, its economic system has always had some reliance on substantial concessionary inputs of [[fossil fuels]], primarily from the former [[Soviet Union]] and the [[People’s Republic of China]].  The fall of the Soviet Union and China’s move towards marketization, had a rippling effect which was also felt trough North Korea’s centrally controlled economy, as it was unable to continue to receive needed supplies on a full price basis.  Despite North Korea’s agricultural efforts of improved [[irrigation]] and [[fertilizers]], it has still be unable to “feed  itself”.  The policies of its centrally controlled economy along with a series of [[natural disasters]] since the mid 1990’s, has brought a cycle of “chronic food shortages” which North Korea has not been able to break free from. 
 
  
Two years of unprecedented floods in 1995 and 1996 marked the beginning of the battle with famine and this persevered with severe droughts in 1997 and 2001.  As such natural disasters destroyed much of the country’s farmland leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.  Hunger and [[malnutrition]] soon became rampant and continues to plague the people of North Korea today. Precise information on the severity of the death toll owing to the perseverance of famine has been difficult to obtain due to the “closed and secretive nature” of the North Korean regime. However, it has been estimated by relief agencies that in the mid 90’s alone, an approximate 2 million people died as a result of the food shortages. Foreign aid workers who where allowed rare access into North Korea in the late 1990’s recalled accounts of local people who relied on artificial food which they made from “ground up twigs, tree barks and leaves”.  Such artificial mixtures are said to have lead to further health problems in the country as it contributes to many cases of internal bleeding and [[diarrhea]].
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Famine struck North Korea in the mid-1990s, set off by unprecedented floods. This [[autarky|autarkic]] urban, industrial society had achieved food self-sufficiency in prior decades through a massive industrialization of agriculture. However, the economic system relied on massive concessionary inputs of [[fossil fuel]]s, primarily from the [[Soviet Union]] and the [[People's Republic of China]]. When the Soviet collapse and China's marketization switched trade to a hard currency, full price basis, North Korea's economy collapsed. The vulnerable agricultural sector experienced a massive failure in 1995–1996, expanding to full-fledged famine by 1996–1999. An estimated 600,000 died of starvation. North Korea did not resume its food self-sufficiency, continuing to rely on external [[food aid]] from [[China]], [[Japan]], [[South Korea]], and the [[United States]] for more than a decade.
  
North Korea has not yet resumed its food self-sufficiency and relies on external food aids from major donors such as [[China]], [[Japan]], [[South Korea]] and the [[United States]].  The political practices of the North Korean leader, [[Kim Jong-II]], potentially have the ability to affect the donations which [[Pyongyang]] may receive.  In early 2007, South Korea considered delaying its rice aid as the North did not meet a key deadline to “shut down a [[nuclear reactor]]”.    However, [[Seoul]] later said it would resume its supply of aid, despite Pyongyang’s failed deadline.  Similar instances as this had also occurred in 2006 when Seoul “suspended shipments of rice and [[fertilizer]]” due to [[missile tests]] carried out by the North.  Incidences involving Pyongyang’s practices and major donors may continue to occur in the future, however the North Korean people are the pawns caught in the middle and whose toll must be examined with the outcomes.
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====Vietnam====
  
====Vietnam====
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The most significant famine which occurred in [[Vietnam]] was the [[Vietnamese Famine of 1945]]. This was marked as an “unprecedented” famine in the nation’s history and led to the deaths of two million people. The famine was brought on by collaboration between the Japanese who had entered Vietnam in 1940 and its French colonialists. In an attempt to dominate Vietnam and combat the uprising [[Viet Minh]] revolutionaries, the French and Japanese controlled the food supply to the Vietnamese people. They forced farmers to destroy [[rice]] along with [[potato]]es and [[bean]] crops and instead ordered the growth of [[peanut]]s and plants for [[Castor oil]]. The destruction of crops, coupled with the spread of pests in the fields, forced the famine to reach as far as north Vietnam causing its peak in early 1945.  
The most significant famine which occurred in [[Vietnam]] was the [[Vietnamese Famine of 1945]]. This was marked as an “unprecedented” famine in the nation’s history and lead to the deaths of 2 million people. The famine was brought on by a collaboration between the [[Japanese]] who had entered Vietnam in 1940 and its [[French]] [[colonialists]]. In an attempt to dominate Vietnam and combat the uprising [[Viet Minh]] [[revolutionaries]], the French and Japanese controlled the food supply to the Vietnamese people. They forced farmers to destroy rice along with potatoes and bean crops and instead ordered the growth of peanuts and plants for Castor oil.  This was grown as it was used to “produce [[gunpowder]]and replaced the use of [[petroleum]]. The destruction of crops coupled with the spread of pests in the fields, forced the famine to reach as far as north Vietnam causing its peak in early 1945.  The famine slowly began to decline thereafter as rural farmers actively joined forces with the Viet Minh, to rise against the nation’s occupying regimes and the devastations of the famine.
 
  
Vietnam has experienced famines on a comparatively smaller scale in more recent year in the mid 1980s and the 1990s. These famines were caused by [[flooding]] and natural disasters and the country has since recovered from these instances.
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Vietnam experienced famines on a comparatively smaller scale in the mid-1980s and the 1990s. These famines were caused by flooding and natural disasters.
  
=== Famine in Europe ===
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=== Europe ===
 
[[Image:Great famine.jpg|thumb|left|From the Apocalypse in a ''Biblia Pauperum'' illuminated at [[Erfurt]] around the time of the Great Famine. Death "(Mors") sits astride a lion whose long tail ends in a ball of flame (Hell). Famine ("Fames") points to her hungry mouth.]]
 
[[Image:Great famine.jpg|thumb|left|From the Apocalypse in a ''Biblia Pauperum'' illuminated at [[Erfurt]] around the time of the Great Famine. Death "(Mors") sits astride a lion whose long tail ends in a ball of flame (Hell). Famine ("Fames") points to her hungry mouth.]]
Western Europe was an arena for catastrophes in the fourteenth century. It began with the [[Great Famine of 1315–1317]] and continued on to the [[Black Death]] of 1347 to 1351. Prior to the Great Famine, Europe had faced many cases of food shortages in local regions which lead to the deaths of some local inhabitants. This was not uncommon and was viewed and almost expected to be part of the normalcy of a region. Local food shortages, however, were vastly different in nature and impact from one of the largest famines to hit Western Europe.    
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Western Europe was an arena for catastrophes in the fourteenth century. It began with the [[Great Famine of 1315–1317]] and continued on to the [[Black Death]] of 1347 to 1351. Prior to the Great Famine, Europe had faced many cases of food shortages in local regions which led to the deaths of some local inhabitants. Local food shortages, however, were vastly different in nature and impact compared to the famines that hit Western Europe in the fourteenth century.
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By the early fourteenth century the population of Europe had steadily risen and consequently so had the need for greater food production. A plentiful harvest throughout Western Europe became a necessity in order to avoid large scale famines. Climatic changes in the beginning of the fourteenth century however, did not allow for optimal conditions in which crops could grow. Cooler weather became more prevalent with damper summers and earlier autumns. Shortfalls in harvests and crop failures occurred more often and soon agricultural resources could provide enough food for its people only under the best of conditions.
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The spring of 1315 saw the first stages of the Great Famine. Wet conditions made for massive crop failures and rotting much of the seed grains before they could even germinate. Although many families began to deplete their food reserves and resorted to finding edible substitutes from forests, such as nuts, plants, and bark, it has been reported that “relatively few” died in this initial year. The impact was more so of wide spread [[malnutrition]].
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The following spring and summer of 1316 changed this outcome. Malnourished families grew weaker and were largely unable to till the lands to produce greater [[harvest]]. The cold and wet weather pattern continued and food reserves become virtually nonexistent. Death tolls were estimated to be so vast that all [[social class|classes]] of society, from [[peasant]]s to noblemen, were affected. No one was safe from the Great Famine. [[Draft animal]]s which were used to till the lands were slaughtered and unspoiled seed grains where eaten. The elderly “volunteered” to starve themselves to death in order for any form of sustenance to go to the younger generations so that they might live to work the fields again. By the same token, infants and young children were abandoned. Although not confirmed, there were widespread rumors of [[cannibalism]], and it has been suggested that [[Brothers Grimm|Grimms]]’ [[fairy tale]] of ''[[Hansel and Gretel]]'' reflects the abandoning of children and cannibalism which took place during the Great Famine of 1315-1322.
 +
 
 +
The famine continued for seven years until the summer of 1322, when the weather pattern returned to more favorable conditions. Recovery, however, was not immediate. There were problems with scarcity of seed grains and animals and people which survived to this point were too weak to work effectively. Although the official timeline for the Great Famine was from 1315 to 1322, the food supply only returned to its “normal” state in 1325 when the population in Western Europe began to increase again.
 +
 
 +
In the centuries which followed, Western Europe faced diseases and other events which led to natural occurrences of small scale food scarcities and famines. The 1590s saw the worst famines in centuries across all of Europe, except in certain areas, notably the [[Netherlands]]. The price of grain all over Europe was high, as was the population. Various types of people were vulnerable to the succession of bad harvests that occurred throughout the 1590s in different regions. The increasing number of wage laborers in the countryside were vulnerable because they had no food of their own, and their meager living was not enough to purchase the expensive grain of a bad-crop year. Town laborers were also at risk because their wages were insufficient to cover the cost of expensive grain, and, to make matters worse, they often received less money in bad-crop years since the disposable income of the wealthy was spent on grain. Often, [[unemployment]] would be the result of the increase in grain prices, leading to ever-increasing numbers of urban poor.  
  
By the early fourteenth century the population of Europe had steadily risen and as such, so had the need for greater food production. The margin of error for food production grew slimmer each year and a plentiful harvest throughout Western Europe became a necessity in order to avoid large scale famines. Climatic changes in the beginning of the fourteenth century however, did not allow for optimal conditions in which crops could grow. Cooler weather became more prevalent with damper summers and earlier autumns. Shortfalls in harvests and crop failures occurred more often and soon, agricultural resources could provide enough food for its people only when the lands where nourished under the best of conditions.
+
The [[Netherlands]] was able to escape most of the damaging effects of the famine, though the 1590s were still difficult years there. Actual famine did not occur, for the [[Amsterdam]] grain trade [with the [[Baltic region|Baltic]]] guaranteed that there would always be something to eat in the Netherlands although hunger was prevalent. The Netherlands had the most commercialized agriculture in all of Europe at this time, growing many industrial crops, such as [[flax]], [[hemp]], and [[hops]]. Agriculture became increasingly specialized and efficient. As a result, productivity and wealth increased, allowing the Netherlands to maintain a steady food supply. By the 1620s, the economy was even more developed, so the country was able to avoid the hardships of that period of famine with even greater impunity.  
  
The spring of 1315 saw the first stages of the Great Famine. Wet conditions made for massive crop failures and were known for rotting much of the seed grains before they could even germinate. Although many families began to deplete their food reserves and resorted to finding edible substitutes from forests, such as nuts, plants and bark, it has been reported that “relatively few” died in this initial year. The impact was more so of wide spread [[malnutrition]].
+
The years around 1620 saw another period of famines sweep across Europe. These famines were generally less severe than the famines of twenty-five years earlier, but they were nonetheless quite serious in many areas. Perhaps the worst famine since 1600, the great famine in [[Finland]] in 1696, killed a third of the population.  
  
The following spring and summer of 1316 changed this outcome. Malnourished families grew weaker and were largely unable to till the lands to produce greater [[harvest]]. The cold and wet weather pattern perused and food reserves become virtually nonexistent. Death tolls were estimated to be so vast that all classes of society, form peasants to noblemen, were affected.  No one was safe from the Great Famine. It is said that [[draft animal]]s which would help till the lands where slaughtered and unspoiled seed grains where eaten. The elderly often “volunteered” to starve themselves to death in order for any form of sustenance to go to the younger generations so that they might live to work the fields again. In the same token, infants and young children were abandoned. Although it has not been properly confirmed, there were wide spread rumors of [[cannibalism]]. It has been suggested that the [[Grimm’s Fairy Tale]] of ''[[Hansel and Gretel]]'', reflects the abandoning of children and [[cannibalism]] which took place during the Great Famine of 1315-1322.
+
Other areas of Europe have known famines much more recently. A number of countries saw famines in the nineteenth century, and famine still occurred in eastern Europe during the twentieth century.
  
The famine perused for seven years until the summer of 1322 when the cold and damp weather pattern began to slow down and returned to conditions which were more favorable for agricultural growth. Recovery, however, was not immediate. There were problems with scarcity of seed grains and any animals and people which survived to this point, were extremely week to work effectively. It has been said that due to the ‘fewer mouths to feed’ at this time, recovery from the Great Famine was possible albeit at a slow pace. Although the official timeline for the Great Famine was from 1315 to 1322, the food supply only returned to its “normal” state in 1325 and the population in Western Europe began to increase again.
+
====Iceland====
 +
In 1783 the [[volcano]] [[Laki (volcano)|Laki]] in south-central [[Iceland]] erupted. The lava caused little direct damage, but ash and [[sulfur dioxide]] spewed out over most of the country, causing three-quarters of the island's livestock to perish. In the following famine, around ten thousand people died, one-fifth of the population of Iceland (Asimov 1984, 152-153).
  
In the centuries which followed, Western Europe faced diseases and other events which lead to natural occurrences of small scale food scarcities and famines. As such occurrences were vastly small in comparison to the Great Famine of 1315-1322 and due to only small regions being affected at any one time, they were generally considered as part and parcel of Western Europe’s natural developmental process and not large scale disasters.
 
 
====Ireland====
 
====Ireland====
 +
[[Image:Famine_memorial_dublin.jpg|right|250 px|thumb|Famine Memorial in Dublin]]
 +
[[The Irish Potato Famine of 1845-1849]] began as a natural disaster but grew in severity due to social and political causes with the “actions and inactions” of the [[Whig government]], headed by [[Lord John Russell]]. Divisions between [[Protestant]]s and [[Catholic]]s within British rule placed many restrictions on Irish Catholics. Under strictly enforced [[Penal Laws]], Catholics, who were mostly Irish, were prevented from entering professions and from purchasing land. Along with it being illegal for Catholics to purchase land, it was also illegal for them to have an education, to speak or be taught in [[Gaelic]], to hold office, vote, join the army, deal in trade, or practice their religion. Due to this form of discrimination, almost half the Irish population was forced to rent out small plots of land from “absentee British Protestant landlords.”
  
[[Image:Famine_memorial_dublin.jpg|right|250 px|thumb|Famine Memorial in Dublin]]
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[[Image:Irish potato famine Bridget O'Donnel.jpg|thumb|left|Depiction of victims of the [[Irish Potato Famine (1845–1849)]]]]
The Irish Potato Famine began as a natural disaster but grew in severity due to social and political causes with the “actions and inactions” of the then [[Whig government]], as it was headed by [[Lord John Russell]].
+
The [[peasant]]s began to grow [[potato]]es on their small plots of land as they could grow triple the amount of potatoes on the land compared to grain; an acre growing potato crops was able to feed a family for a year. It was estimated that about half of Ireland’s population was dependent on potatoes for survival and the crop provided approximately 60 percent of the nation’s food needs. In the summer of 1845, Ireland was struck with “potato blight” ([[Phytophthora infestans]]) and crops began to fail. Within six months there were large scale food shortages and by the following year, 1846, famine was a full grown epidemic throughout the land. Ironically in the initial year of the famine, although potato crops had failed, Ireland’s British lords were producing grain for export.  
Divisions between [[Protestants]] and [[Catholics]] within British rule placed many restrictions on Irish Catholics. Under strictly enforced [[Penal Laws]], Catholics, who were mostly Irish, were prevented from entering professions and from purchasing land. Along with it being illegal for Catholics to purchase land, it was also illegal for them to have an education, to speak or be taught in [[Gaelic]], to hold office, vote, join the army, deal in trade, or practice their religion. Due to this form of discrimination, almost half the Irish population was forced to rent out small plots of land from “absentee British Protestant landlords.” The peasants began to grow potatoes on their small plots of land as they could grow triple the amount of potatoes on the land as grain.  
 
  
In the minimal area of land which could be afforded by the peasants an acre growing potato crops was able to feed a family for a year. It was estimated that about half of Ireland’s population was dependent on potatoes for survival and the crop provided “approximately 60 per cent of the nation’s food needs.” The potato crop was unfortunately vulnerable to an air carried fungal disease the fungus [[Phytophthora infestans]], otherwise known as "[[potato blight]]" which turned potatoes into an inedible “mushy mess” and for which there was no cure. This however, had not previously been a problem for the millions of Irish peasants whose daily diet was dependent upon this crop. The summer of 1845 soon changed that as Ireland was struck with “potato blight” and crops began to fail.  
+
The Irish Potato Famine was the culmination of a social, biological, political, and economic catastrophe. In the colonial context of Ireland's domination by Britain, the root cause of the famine was perceived by many to be British policy. Certainly, the response of the British government was slow and inadequate. As diseases brought on by the famine worsened in the late 1840s, the British government began to implement changes to their [[laissez-faire]] economic policies and attempted to provide [[aid]]. By late 1847, soup kitchens and more grain began entering into Ireland, although they were poorly distributed and initially did very little to help.  
  
[[Image:Irish potato famine Bridget O'Donnel.jpg|thumb|left|Depiction of victims of the [[Irish Potato Famine (1845–1849)]]]]
+
The immediate after-effects of the famine continued until 1851. Much is unrecorded, but various estimates suggest that between five hundred thousand and more than 1 million people died in the years 1846 to 1849 as a result of hunger or disease. Also within a period of a decade, 1845-1855, it is estimated that close to two million people emigrated as a means to escape the devastations of the Irish Potato Famine.
  
Six months into the potato crop failure, brought about large scale food shortages and by the following year, 1846, famine was a full grown epidemic throughout the land. Ironically in the initial year of the famine, although potato crops had failed, Ireland’s British lords were producing grain for export. The discrimination enforced by the Penal Laws, made Irish peasants too poor to purchase the grain which they farmed for their British lords. The British government initially refused to enforce any changes to grain exports despite famine conditions in the land, as it remained stout to its [[laissez-faire]] economic policies. Under this principle the government strongly believed that there should be “as little government interference with the economy as possible,and therefore, firmly rejected any possibility of stopping Irish grain exports.  
+
====Finland====
 +
[[The Finnish famine of 1866-1868]] was the last famine in [[Finland]] and northern [[Sweden]]. In Finland the famine is known as "the great hunger years," or ''suuret nälkävuodet.'' About 15 percent of the entire population died; in the hardest-hit areas up to 20 percent. The total death toll was 270,000 in three years, about 150,000 in excess of normal mortality. The worst-hit areas were [[Satakunta]], [[Tavastia]], [[Ostrobothnia]], and [[North Karelia]].
  
The initial lack of food conditions in Ireland strengthened largely into an artificially enforced famine by the ruling British government. The Whig government viewed the onset of the famine as a “sign from God” and as a lesson from which the Irish could “better themselves.The famine was also viewed as an opportunity for Britain to bring Ireland under “total” English Law. Britain’s discrimination against Catholic Irish was so strong, that many believed the “Irish should be left alone to deal with the problems themselves.” As diseases brought on by the famine worsened in the late 1840’s, the British government began to implement changes to their laissez-faire economical policies and attempted to provide aid. By late 1847, soup kitchens and more grain began entering into Ireland in an attempt by the government to ease the lands devastating conditions. Unfortunately the implementations of these devises were very poorly distributed and initially did very little help.  
+
The summer of 1866 was extremely rainy, and staple crops failed widely: [[potato]]es and [[root vegetable]]s rotted in the fields, and conditions for sowing [[grain]] in the autumn were unfavorable. When stored food ran out, thousands took to the roads to beg. The following winter was hard, and spring was late. In many places, lakes and rivers remained frozen until June. After a promisingly warm midsummer, freezing temperatures in early September ravaged crops; the harvest was about half the average. By the autumn of 1867, people were dying by the thousand. The weather returned to normal in 1868 and that year's harvest was somewhat better than average, but [[contagious disease]]s spread in the previous year killed many more.  
  
It has been estimated that nearly one-eighth of Ireland’s population at that time died. From 1846 to 1851, about a million people had fallen to epidemic diseases and starvation. Also within a period of a decade, [[1845-1855]], it is estimated that close to two million people emigrated as a means to escape the devastations of Irish Potato Famine.  
+
====Estonia====
 +
The [[Great Famine of Estonia (1695–1697)]] was responsible for the death of 70,000 to 75,000 people, approximately 20 percent of the population of what was at that time [[Swedish Estonia]].
  
After the Irish Potato Famine, the last significant famine to strike Western Europe was towards the end of the [[Second World War]] in the [[Netherlands]]. This famine which developed due to a [[Nazi]] blockade in the western Netherlands began in October of 1944 and was known as the “[[Dutch Hunger Winter]].” It is estimated about 40,000 people were exposed to the famine which ended with the liberation of the Netherlands in early May 1945.
+
This famine resulted from unfavorable weather conditions which began in 1694. The summer of 1695 was cold and rainy, followed by an early autumn frost that destroyed the summer crops. Cold conditions continued during 1696, with significant rainfall throughout the summer. Starvation began to hit the population, with the weaker and poorer people dying during the winter. It was not until 1698 that sufficient food was produced to support the Estonian population.
  
 
====Russia and USSR====
 
====Russia and USSR====
[[Image:Holodomor2.jpg|thumb|Child victim of the [[Holodomor]] famine]]
 
Droughts and famines in [[Imperial Russia]] are known to have happened every 10 to 13 years, with average droughts happening every 5 to 7 years. Famines continued in the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] era, the most famous one being the ''[[Holodomor]]'' in [[Ukraine]] (1932-1933) which also involved a significant part of the population of [[Russia]]. The last major famine in the USSR happened in 1947 due to the severe [[drought]].
 
 
====Iceland====
 
In 1783 the [[volcano]] [[Laki (volcano)|Laki]] in south-central [[Iceland]] erupted. The lava caused little direct damage, but ash and sulfur dioxide spewed out over most of the country, causing three-quarters of the island's livestock to perish. In the following famine, around ten thousand people died, one-fifth of the population of Iceland. [Asimov, 1984, 152-153]
 
  
====Finland====
+
[[Drought]]s and famines in [[Imperial Russia]] are known to have happened every 10 to 13 years, with average droughts happening every five to seven years. Famines continued in the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] era, the most famous one being the ''[[Holodomor]]'' in [[Ukraine]] (1932-1933) which also involved a significant part of the population of [[Russia]].  
[[The Finnish famine of 1866-1868]] was the last famine in [[Finland]] and northern [[Sweden]], and the last major naturally caused famine in [[Europe]]. In Finland the famine is known as "the great hunger years", or ''suuret nälkävuodet''. About 15 percent of the entire population died; in the hardest-hit areas up to 20 percent. The total death toll was 270,000 in three years, about 150,000 in excess of normal mortality. The worst-hit areas were [[Satakunta]], [[Tavastia]], [[Ostrobothnia]], and [[North Karelia]].
 
  
The summer of 1866 was extremely rainy, and staple crops failed widely: [[potato]]es and [[root vegetable]]s rotted in the fields, and conditions for sowing [[grain]] in the autumn were unfavorable. When stored food ran out, thousands took to the roads to beg. The following winter was hard, and spring was late. In many places, lakes and rivers remained frozen until June. After a promisingly warm midsummer, freezing temperatures in early September ravaged crops; the harvest was about half the average. By the autumn of 1867, people were dying by the thousand.  
+
The [[Russian famine of 1921|first famine in the USSR]] happened in 1921-1923 and garnered wide international attention. It was due to the Southern type of drought, the most affected area being the Southeastern areas of [[European Russia]] (including [[Volga]] area, or ''Povolzhye,'' especially national republics of [[Idel-Ural]], and Ukraine.  
  
The weather returned to normal in 1868 and that year's harvest was somewhat better than average, but [[contagious disease]]s spread in the previous year killed many more. At that time [[Economy of Finland|Finnish economy]] was liberalized, which led to increasing [[standard of living|living standards]], and no similar famines have thereafter occurred.
+
The second Soviet famine happened during the collectivization in the USSR. In 1932-1933 confiscations of [[grain]] and other food by the [[Soviet]] authorities caused a famine which affected more than 40 million people, especially in the south on the [[Don River, Russia|Don]] and [[Kuban]] areas and in [[Ukraine]], where by various estimates from 5 to 10 million may have starved to death in the event known as ''[[Holodomor]]'' (Fawkes 2006). About 200,000 [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] [[nomad]]s fled to [[China]], [[Iran]], [[Mongolia]], and [[Afghanistan]] during the famine.
 +
 +
The last major famine in the [[USSR]] happened in 1947 as a cumulative effect of consequences of collectivization, war damage, the severe drought in 1946 in over 50 percent of the grain-productive zone of the country, and government social policy and mismanagement of grain reserves. This led to an estimated 1 to 1.5 million excess deaths as well as to secondary population losses due to reduced [[fertility]] (Ellman 2000).
  
== Famine Today ==
+
== Famine today ==
 
Today, famine strikes African countries the hardest, but with ongoing wars, internal struggles, and economic instability, famine continues to be a worldwide problem with millions of individuals suffering.  
 
Today, famine strikes African countries the hardest, but with ongoing wars, internal struggles, and economic instability, famine continues to be a worldwide problem with millions of individuals suffering.  
The [[Famine Early Warning Systems Network]] labeled [[Niger]] with emergency status in July of 2005, as well as [[Chad]], [[Ethiopia]], [[South Sudan]], [[Somalia]] and [[Zimbabwe]].  In January 2006, the United Nations [[Food and Agriculture Organization]] warned that 11 million people in Somalia, [[Kenya]], [[Djibouti]] and Ethiopia were in danger of starvation due to the combination of severe drought and military conflicts. [http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000206/index.html]
 
  
Many believe that the [[Green Revolution]] is still the answer to famine.  The Green Revolution began in the 20th century with hybrid strains of high-yielding crops.  Not only does this contribute to a larger amount of the crop, but it can also stabilize production.  Some criticize the process, stating that these new high-yielding crops require more chemical fertilizers and pesticides, which can harm the environment.  However, it may be an option for developing nations suffering from famine, and these crops can be bred as to adapt to the conditions of the country. These high-yielding crops make it technically possible to feed the world and eliminate famine.  They can be developed to provide optimal nutrition, and a well-nourished, well-developed population would emerge.  Some say that the problems of famine and ill-nourishment are the results of ethical dilemmas over using the technologies we have, as well as cultural and class differences.
+
The [[Famine Early Warning Systems Network]] (FEWS NET) with emergency status in July of 2005, as well as [[Chad]], [[Ethiopia]], [[South Sudan]], [[Somalia]], and [[Zimbabwe]]. In January 2006, the United Nations [[Food and Agriculture Organization]] warned that 11 million people in Somalia, [[Kenya]], [[Djibouti]], and Ethiopia were in danger of starvation due to the combination of severe drought and military conflicts (FAO Newsroom, 2006)
  
[[Frances Moore Lappé]], later co-founder of the [[Institute for Food and Development Policy]] (Food First) argued in ''Diet for a Small Planet'' (1971) that [[vegetarian]] diets can provide food for larger populations, with the same resources, compared to omnivorous diets.
+
In modern times, governments and [[non-governmental organization]]s that deliver famine relief have limited resources with which to address the multiple situations of food insecurity that are occurring simultaneously. Various methods of categorizing the gradations of food security have thus been used in order to most efficiently allocate food relief. One of the earliest were the [[Indian Famine Codes]] devised by the British in the 1880s. The Codes listed three stages of food insecurity: near-scarcity, scarcity and famine, and were highly influential in the creation of subsequent famine warning or measurement systems. The early warning system developed to monitor the region inhabited by the [[Turkana people]] in northern [[Kenya]] also has three levels, but links each stage to a pre-planned response to mitigate the crisis and prevent its deterioration.
  
=== Levels of food insecurity ===
+
Since 2004, many of the most important organizations in famine relief, such as the [[World Food Programme]] and the [[U.S. Agency for International Development]], have adopted a five-level scale measuring intensity and magnitude. The intensity scale uses both livelihoods' measures and measurements of mortality and child malnutrition to categorize a situation.
In modern times, governments and [[non-governmental organization]]s that deliver famine relief have limited resources with which to address the multiple situations of food insecurity that are occurring simultaneously.  Various methods of categorizing the gradations of food security have thus been used in order to most efficiently allocate food relief.  One of the earliest were the [[Indian Famine Codes]] devised by the British in the 1880s.  The Codes listed three stages of food insecurity: near-scarcity, scarcity and famine, and were highly influential in the creation of subsequent famine warning or measurement systems.  The early warning system developed to monitor the region inhabited by the [[Turkana people]] in northern [[Kenya]] also has three levels, but links each stage to a pre-planned response to mitigate the crisis and prevent its deterioration.
 
  
The experiences of famine relief organizations throughout the world over the 1980s and 1990s resulted in at least two major developments: the "livelihoods approach" and the increased use of nutrition indicators to determine the severity of a crisis. Famine does not begin to kill people until it destroys livelihoods.  Individuals and groups in food stressful situations will attempt to cope by rationing consumption, finding alternative means to supplement [[income]], etc. before taking desperate measures, such as selling off plots of [[agriculture|agricultural]] land. Only when all means of self-support are exhausted does the affected population begin to migrate in search in food and fall victim to outright [[starvation]].  Famine may thus be seen as a social phenomenon, involving [[market]]s, the price of food, and social support structures.  A second lesson drawn was the increased use of rapid nutrition assessments, in particular of children, to give a quantitative measure of the famine's severity.  
+
Many believe that the [[Green Revolution]] is the answer to famine. The Green Revolution began in the twentieth century with hybrid strains of high-yielding crops. Not only does this contribute to a larger amount of the crop, but it can also stabilize production and these crops can be bred as to adapt to the conditions of the country. These high-yielding crops make it technically possible to feed the world and eliminate famine. Some criticize the process, however, stating that these new high-yielding crops require more chemical [[fertilizer]]s and [[pesticide]]s, which can harm the environment.  
  
Since 2004, many of the most important organizations in famine relief, such as the [[World Food Programme]] and the [[U.S. Agency for International Development]], have adopted a five-level scale measuring intensity and magnitude.  The intensity scale uses both livelihoods' measures and measurements of mortality and child malnutrition to categorize a situation as food secure, food insecure, food crisis, famine, severe famine, and extreme famine.  The number of deaths determines the magnitude designation, with under 1000 fatalities defining a "minor famine" and a "catastrophic famine" resulting in over 1,000,000 deaths.
+
== References ==
  
== Notes ==
+
*Asimov, Isaac. 1984. ''Asimov's New Guide to Science.'' New York: Basic Books, Inc. New Ed., Penguin Books Ltd. 1993. ISBN 978-0140172133
<references/>
+
*Becker, Jasper. 1998. ''Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine.'' Holt. ISBN 9780805056686
 +
*Bhatia, B.M. 1985. ''Famines in India: A study in Some Aspects of the Economic History of India with Special Reference to Food Problem.'' Delhi: Konark Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
 +
*Chang, Gene Hsin and Guanzhong James. 1997. "Communal Dining and the Chinese Famine of 1958-1961" ''Wen Economic Development and Cultural Change'' 46 (1): 1-34.
 +
*Davis, Mike. 2001. ''Late Victorian Holocausts: El Niño Famines and the Making of the Third World.'' London: Verso. [http://maximumred.blogspot.com/2005_01_01_maximumred_archive.html Excerpt] Retrieved May 16, 2008.
 +
*Dutt, Romesh C. [1900] 2005. ''Open Letters to Lord Curzon on Famines and Land Assessments in India.'' reprint ed. Adamant Media Corporation, Elibron Classics Series. ISBN 1402151152
 +
*Dutt, Romesh C. [1902] 2001. ''The Economic History of India under early British Rule.'' Routledge. ISBN 0415244935
 +
*Ellman, M. 2000. "The 1947 Soviet famine and the entitlement approach to famines" ''Cambridge Journal of Economics'' 24: 603-630.
 +
*FAO Newsroom. 2006. [http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000206/index.html Millions of people are on the brink of starvation in the Horn of Africa] Retrieved May 15, 2008.
 +
*Fawkes, Helen. 2006. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6179818.stm "Legacy of famine divides Ukraine"] ''BBC News''. Retrieved May 16, 2008.
 +
*Ferreyra, Eduardo. 2004. [http://www.mitosyfraudes.org/Polit/Famines.html ''Fearfull Famines of the Past'']. FAEC (Argentinean Foundation for a Scientific Ecology). Retrieved May 16, 2008.
 +
*Golubev, Genady and Nikolai Dronin. 2004. ''Geography of Droughts and Food Problems in Russia (1900-2000).'' Report of the International Project on Global Environmental Change and Its Threat to Food and Water Security in Russia.
 +
*Greenough, Paul R. 1982. ''Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal. The Famine of 1943-1944.'' Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195030826
 +
*Jordan, William Chester. 1997. ''The Great Famine.'' Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691058917
 +
*Lappe, Frances Moore. [1971] 1991. ''Diet for a Small Planet.'' Ballantine Books 20th Anniversary edition. ISBN 9780345373663
 +
*Mallory, Walter H. 1926. ''China: Land of Famine''. American Geographical Society.
 +
*Mead, Margaret. 1970. "The Changing Significance of Food" ''American Scientist'' 58 (2): 176-189.
 +
*Milich, L. 1997. [http://ag.arizona.edu/~lmilich/desclim.html ''Desertification'']. Retrieved May 16, 2008.
 +
*O'Grada, Cormac. 2000. ''Black '47 and Beyond: The Great Irish Famine in History, Economy, and Memory.'' Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691070155
 +
*Sen, Amartya. 1983. ''Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlements and Deprivation.'' Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198284635
 +
*Srivastava, H.C. 1968. ''The History of Indian Famines from 1858-1918.'' Agra: Sri Ram Mehra and Co.
 +
*Sommerville, Keith. 2001. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/2449527.stm "Why famine stalks Africa"] ''BBC News''. Retrieved May 26, 2008.
 +
*Will, Pierre-Etienne. 1990. ''Bureaucracy and Famine in Eighteenth-Century China.'' Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804717335
 +
*Wolde-Georgis, Tsegay. 1997. [http://www.ccb.ucar.edu/ijas/ijasno2/georgis.html "El Niño and Drought Early Warning in Ethiopia"] ''Internet Journal of African Studies'' Issue No. 2. Retrieved May 16, 2008.
 +
*Woo-Cumings, Meredith. 2002. [http://www.adbi.org/files/2002.01.rp31.ecology.famine.northkorea.pdf|''The Political Ecology of Famine: The North Korean Catastrophe and Its Lessons'']. ADB Institute Research Paper. Retrieved May 26, 2008.
  
== References ==
+
== External Links ==
*Asimov, Isaac, ''Asimov's New Guide to Science'', pp. 152-153, Basic Books, Inc. : 1984.
+
All links retrieved March 23, 2024.
* Bhatia, B.M. (1985) Famines in India: A study in Some Aspects of the Economic History of India with Special Reference to Food Problem, Delhi: Konark Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
 
*Davis, Mike, ''Late Victorian Holocausts: El Niño Famines and the Making of the Third World'', London, Verso, 2002 ([http://maximumred.blogspot.com/2005_01_01_maximumred_archive.html Excerpt] online.)
 
* Dutt, Romesh C.  ''Open Letters to Lord Curzon on Famines and Land Assessments in India'', first published 1900, 2005 edition by Adamant Media Corporation, Elibron Classics Series, ISBN 1-4021-5115-2.
 
* Dutt, Romesh C. ''The Economic History of India under early British Rule'', first published 1902,  2001 edition by [[Routledge]], ISBN 0-415-24493-5
 
* Genady Golubev and Nikolai Dronin, ''Geography of Droughts and Food Problems in Russia (1900-2000)'', Report of the International Project on Global Environmental Change and Its Threat to Food and Water Security in Russia (February, 2004).
 
*Greenough, Paul R., ''Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal. The Famine of 1943-1944'', Oxford University Press 1982
 
* Mead, Margaret.  “The Changing Significance of Food.” American Scientist.  (March-April 1970).  pp. 176-189.
 
*[[Amartya Sen|Sen, Amartya]], ''Poverty and Famines : An Essay on Entitlements and Deprivation'', Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1982
 
* Srivastava, H.C., The History of Indian Famines from 1858-1918, Sri Ram Mehra and Co., Agra, 1968.
 
*Sommerville, Keith. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/2449527.stm Why famine stalks Africa], BBC, 2001
 
*Woo-Cumings, Meredith, ''[http://www.adbi.org/files/2002.01.rp31.ecology.famine.northkorea.pdf|The Political Ecology of Famine: The North Korean Catastrophe and Its Lessons]'', ADB Institute Research Paper 31, January 2002.
 
  
== External Links ==
 
*[http://www.borgenproject.org/ The Borgen Project] Global campaign to bring political attention to famine and poverty.
 
 
*[http://www.fews.net/ Famine Early Warning System] monitors agricultural production and other warning signs worldwide
 
*[http://www.fews.net/ Famine Early Warning System] monitors agricultural production and other warning signs worldwide
*[http://www.wfp.org/ United Nations World Food Programme]Hunger relief against poverty and famine
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*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/africa/2006/africa_food_crisis/default.stm In Depth: Africa's Food Crisis], BBC News
 
*[http://www.ifpri.org/ International Food Policy Research Institute] Sustainable solutions for ending hunger
 
*[http://www.ifpri.org/ International Food Policy Research Institute] Sustainable solutions for ending hunger
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/africa/2006/africa_food_crisis/default.stm In Depth: Africa's Food Crisis], [[BBC News]]
+
*[http://www.borgenproject.org/ The Borgen Project] Global campaign to bring political attention to famine and poverty.
 +
*[http://www.wfp.org/ United Nations World Food Programme] Hunger relief against poverty and famine
 +
 
  
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Latest revision as of 00:40, 25 March 2024


A famine is a phenomenon in which a large percentage of the population of a region or country is so undernourished that death by starvation or other related diseases becomes increasingly common. Famine is associated both with natural causes, such as crop failure and pestilence, and artificial or man-made causes including war and genocide.

Many areas that suffered famines in the past have protected themselves through technological and social development. In spite of the much greater technological and economic resources of the modern world, however, famine still strikes many parts of the world, mostly in the developing nations. A prominent economist on the subject, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen, has noted that no functioning democracy has ever suffered a famine.

In contemporary times, both governments and non-governmental organizations are active in delivering humanitarian aid to places where famine strikes. However, resources are often limited, and the cause of the famine itself may add to the difficulty of distributing food effectively. While some have suggested that population growth be curbed since food resources are finite and will become inadequate to ensure food security for all if the number of people in the world increases much more, others recognize that the threat of famine lies more in distribution and production than the potential for food in the world. The solution to famine, therefore, can be seen to lie in a change in human nature, rather than in external factors. Were everyone concerned for the health and well-being of all people throughout the world, with such an attitude and awareness people would find a way to produce and distribute sufficient food supplies and so avoid the suffering of famine.

Characteristics and effects

Famine can be defined as the catastrophic disruption of the social, economic, and institutional systems that provide for food production, distribution, and consumption. Famines not only kill masses of people, they also destroy livestock, which people depend upon as food and for their livelihood, extending the impact.

Famines also have a very strong impact on demographics. Mortality is concentrated among children and the elderly. A consistent demographic fact is that in all recorded famines, male mortality exceeds female. Possible reasons for this include greater female resilience under the pressure of malnutrition, and that women are more skilled at gathering and processing wild foods and other fall-back famine foods. Famines therefore leave the reproductive core of a population—adult women—less affected compared to other population categories, and post-famine periods are often characterized a "rebound" with increased births. Even though famines reduce the size of the population significantly, in fact even the most severe famines have rarely dented population growth for more than a few years. The mortality in China in 1958–1961, Bengal in 1943, and Ethiopia in 1983–1985 was all made up by a growing population in just a few years. Of greater long-term demographic impact is emigration: Ireland was chiefly depopulated after the famine of the 1940s by waves of emigration.

It has been observed that periods of extensive famine can lead to a reduction in the number of reported female children in some cultures. Demographers and historians have debated the causes of this trend and some believe that parents deliberately select male children, through the process of infanticide, as they are perceived as being more valuable to society. Others have suggested that biological processes may be at work.

Causes

In biological terms, a population beyond its regional carrying capacity causes famine. While the operative cause of famine is an imbalance of population with respect to food supply, the actual extent of famines depend on a combination of political, economic, and biological factors. Famines can be exacerbated by poor governance or inadequate logistics for food distribution. In some modern cases, it is political strife, poverty, and violence that disrupts the agricultural and food distribution processes.

The devastations brought on by famines are not accountable to one single event in a region. Rather, famines are brought on by an accumulation of events and policies that carry both “natural” and “artificial” characteristics. Floods, droughts, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and other such disasters are part of the “natural” causes which are out of human control and oftentimes can lead to famines. On the other hand, wars, civil strife, government’s poor management of resources, and other similar events are viewed as the “artificial” causes which may also aid towards developing famine within a region. These events, both natural and artificial, do not generally work in isolation from one another. It is the combination of these causes which, over time, progressively erodes the capacity of countries and regions to deal with what could otherwise be "short-term shocks" to the land and its economy.

There is a particularly strong relationship between droughts, the subsequent demise of agriculture, and famines. However, droughts in many well-developed countries do not contribute to famines. On the other hand, a drought coupled with over populated areas, already existing inability to feed masses of people, and poor healthcare facilities easily tips the scales towards the mass devastations which result from famines in many developing countries. Poor healthcare and sanitation facilities brings about additional problems of diseases such as meningitis, malaria, and cholera. Under-nourished people are naturally more susceptible to these diseases and this only adds to the many factors which cause death and suffering in famine stricken regions.

While famines may appear to be similar across the globe, the policies from which they may attain relief differ immensely according to their governments, regions and the intensity and length of the famines. One “optimal solution” cannot be identified as the main means to cure the region that is affected.

Historical famines by region

Africa

Somalians sit in the sun as they wait for food provided during Operation Provide Relief, Somalia, in 1992.

Famines have been reported in various parts of Africa throughout history. In the mid-twenty-second century B.C.E., a sudden and short-lived climatic change that caused reduced rainfall resulted in several decades of drought in Upper Egypt. The resulting famine and civil strife is believed to have been a major cause of the collapse of the Old Kingdom. In the 1680s, famine extended across the entire Sahel, and in 1738 half the population of Timbuktu died of famine (Milich 1997).

Historians of African famine have documented repeated famines in Ethiopia. Possibly the worst episode occurred in 1888 and succeeding years, as the epizootic rinderpest, introduced into Eritrea by infected cattle, spread southwards reaching ultimately as far as South Africa. In Ethiopia it was estimated that as much as 90 percent of the national herd died, rendering rich farmers and herders destitute overnight. This coincided with drought associated with an el Nino oscillation, human epidemics of smallpox, and in several countries, intense war. The great famine that afflicted Ethiopia from 1888 to 1892 cost it roughly one-third of its population (Wolde-Georgis 1997).

In the first half of the twentieth century, apart from a few notable counter-examples such as the famine in Rwanda during World War II and the Malawi famine of 1949, most famines were localized and brief food shortages. The specter of famine recurred only in the early 1970s, when Ethiopia and the west African Sahel suffered drought and famine. The Ethiopian famine of that time was closely linked to the crisis of feudalism in that country, and in due course helped to bring about the downfall of the Emperor Haile Selassie. The Sahelian famine was associated with the slowly growing crisis of pastoralism in Africa, which has seen livestock herding decline as a viable way of life.

Since then, African famines became more frequent, more widespread and more severe. Many African countries are not self-sufficient in food production, relying on income from cash crops to import food. Agriculture in Africa is susceptible to climatic fluctuations, especially droughts which can reduce the amount of food produced locally. Other agricultural problems include soil infertility, land degradation and erosion, and swarms of desert locusts which can destroy whole crops and livestock diseases. The most serious famines have been caused by a combination of drought, misguided economic policies, and conflict. Political instability was a driving force in the famine of Karamoja, Uganda in 1980. This famine carries one of the worst mortality rates which has been recently recorded: 21 percent of the population of Karamoja died, including 60 percent of infants. AIDS is also having long-term economic effects on agriculture by reducing the available workforce, and is creating new vulnerabilities to famine by overburdening poor households.

Asia

China

Chinese scholars kept count of 1,828 rampages by the famine since 108 B.C.E. to 1911 in one province or another—an average of close to one famine per year (Mallory 1926). From 1333 to 1337 a terrible famine killed six million Chinese. The four famines of 1810, 1811, 1846, and 1849 are said to have killed not less than 45 million people (Ferreyra 2004). China's Qing Dynasty bureaucracy, which devoted extensive attention to minimizing famines, is credited with averting a series of famines following El Niño-Southern Oscillation-linked droughts and floods. These events are comparable, though somewhat smaller in scale, to the ecological trigger events of China's vast nineteenth century famines (Will 1990). Qing China carried out its relief efforts, which included vast shipments of food, a requirement that the rich open their storehouses to the poor, and price regulation, as part of a state guarantee of subsistence to the peasantry (known as ming-sheng).

Chinese officials engaged in famine relief, nineteenth century engraving

When a stressed monarchy shifted from state management and direct shipments of grain to monetary charity in the mid-nineteenth century, the system broke down. Thus the 1867–1868 famine under the Tongzhi Restoration was successfully relieved but the Great North China Famine of 1877–1878 , caused by drought across northern China, was a vast catastrophe. The province of Shanxi was substantially depopulated as grains ran out, and desperately starving people stripped forests, fields, and their very houses for food. Estimated mortality is 9.5 to 13 million people (Davis 2001).

The largest famine of the twentieth century, and almost certainly of all time, was the 1958–1961 Great Leap Forward famine. The immediate causes of this famine lay in Chairman Mao Zedong's ill-fated attempt to transform China from an agricultural nation. Communist Party cadres across China insisted that peasants abandon their farms for collective farms, and begin to produce steel in small foundries, often melting down their farm instruments in the process. Collectivization undermined incentives for the investment of labor and resources in agriculture; unrealistic plans for decentralized metal production sapped needed labor; unfavorable weather conditions; and communal dining halls encouraged overconsumption of available food (Chang and Wen 1997). Such was the centralized control of information and the intense pressure on party cadres to report only good news—such as production quotas met or exceeded—that information about the escalating disaster was effectively suppressed. When the leadership did become aware of the scale of the famine, it did little to respond.

The 1958–1961 famine is estimated to have caused excess mortality of about 30 million. It was only when the famine had wrought its worst that Mao reversed the agricultural collectivization policies, which were effectively dismantled in 1978. China has not experienced a major famine since 1961 (Woo-Cummings, 2002).

India

Owing to its almost entire dependence upon the monsoon rains, India is liable to crop failures, which upon occasion deepen into famine. There were 14 famines in India between the eleventh and seventeenth centuries (Bhatia, 1985). For example, during the 1022-1033 famines entire provinces were depopulated. Famine in Deccan killed at least 2 million people in 1702-1704. There were approximately 25 major famines spread through states such as Tamil Nadu in the south, and Bihar and Bengal in the east during the latter half of the nineteenth century.

Famines were a product of both natural causes such as uneven rainfall, and man-made causes brought on by British economic and administrative policies throughout the region. Since 1857, British administrative policies in India led to the seizure and conversion of local farmland to foreign-owned plantations, restrictions on internal trade, heavy taxation of Indian citizens to support unsuccessful British expeditions in Afghanistan, inflationary measures that increased the price of food and substantial exports of staple crops from India to Britain. Observations by the Famine Commission of 1880 supported the notion that food distribution was more to blame for famines than food scarcity. They observed that each province in British India, including Burma, had a surplus of food grains, and the annual surplus was 5.16 million tons. British citizens, such as William Digby, agitated for policy reforms and famine relief, but the governing British Viceroy of the time, Lord Lytton, opposed such changes with the belief that they would stimulate shirking by Indian workers.

Famines continued to persist in Colonial India until independence was gained in 1947. The last major famine to afflict India before its independence, was again mainly in the region of Bengal between 1943 to 1944. This killed three million to four million people. Since India’s independence, the country has never faced another major famine. The closest India has come to a famine was in 1966, in the region of Bihar. This situation was, however, alleviated before it reached the stages of a famine when the United States allocated 900,000 tons of grain in aid to the stricken area.

North Korea

Famine struck North Korea in the mid-1990s, set off by unprecedented floods. This autarkic urban, industrial society had achieved food self-sufficiency in prior decades through a massive industrialization of agriculture. However, the economic system relied on massive concessionary inputs of fossil fuels, primarily from the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. When the Soviet collapse and China's marketization switched trade to a hard currency, full price basis, North Korea's economy collapsed. The vulnerable agricultural sector experienced a massive failure in 1995–1996, expanding to full-fledged famine by 1996–1999. An estimated 600,000 died of starvation. North Korea did not resume its food self-sufficiency, continuing to rely on external food aid from China, Japan, South Korea, and the United States for more than a decade.

Vietnam

The most significant famine which occurred in Vietnam was the Vietnamese Famine of 1945. This was marked as an “unprecedented” famine in the nation’s history and led to the deaths of two million people. The famine was brought on by collaboration between the Japanese who had entered Vietnam in 1940 and its French colonialists. In an attempt to dominate Vietnam and combat the uprising Viet Minh revolutionaries, the French and Japanese controlled the food supply to the Vietnamese people. They forced farmers to destroy rice along with potatoes and bean crops and instead ordered the growth of peanuts and plants for Castor oil. The destruction of crops, coupled with the spread of pests in the fields, forced the famine to reach as far as north Vietnam causing its peak in early 1945.

Vietnam experienced famines on a comparatively smaller scale in the mid-1980s and the 1990s. These famines were caused by flooding and natural disasters.

Europe

From the Apocalypse in a Biblia Pauperum illuminated at Erfurt around the time of the Great Famine. Death "(Mors") sits astride a lion whose long tail ends in a ball of flame (Hell). Famine ("Fames") points to her hungry mouth.

Western Europe was an arena for catastrophes in the fourteenth century. It began with the Great Famine of 1315–1317 and continued on to the Black Death of 1347 to 1351. Prior to the Great Famine, Europe had faced many cases of food shortages in local regions which led to the deaths of some local inhabitants. Local food shortages, however, were vastly different in nature and impact compared to the famines that hit Western Europe in the fourteenth century.

By the early fourteenth century the population of Europe had steadily risen and consequently so had the need for greater food production. A plentiful harvest throughout Western Europe became a necessity in order to avoid large scale famines. Climatic changes in the beginning of the fourteenth century however, did not allow for optimal conditions in which crops could grow. Cooler weather became more prevalent with damper summers and earlier autumns. Shortfalls in harvests and crop failures occurred more often and soon agricultural resources could provide enough food for its people only under the best of conditions.

The spring of 1315 saw the first stages of the Great Famine. Wet conditions made for massive crop failures and rotting much of the seed grains before they could even germinate. Although many families began to deplete their food reserves and resorted to finding edible substitutes from forests, such as nuts, plants, and bark, it has been reported that “relatively few” died in this initial year. The impact was more so of wide spread malnutrition.

The following spring and summer of 1316 changed this outcome. Malnourished families grew weaker and were largely unable to till the lands to produce greater harvest. The cold and wet weather pattern continued and food reserves become virtually nonexistent. Death tolls were estimated to be so vast that all classes of society, from peasants to noblemen, were affected. No one was safe from the Great Famine. Draft animals which were used to till the lands were slaughtered and unspoiled seed grains where eaten. The elderly “volunteered” to starve themselves to death in order for any form of sustenance to go to the younger generations so that they might live to work the fields again. By the same token, infants and young children were abandoned. Although not confirmed, there were widespread rumors of cannibalism, and it has been suggested that Grimmsfairy tale of Hansel and Gretel reflects the abandoning of children and cannibalism which took place during the Great Famine of 1315-1322.

The famine continued for seven years until the summer of 1322, when the weather pattern returned to more favorable conditions. Recovery, however, was not immediate. There were problems with scarcity of seed grains and animals and people which survived to this point were too weak to work effectively. Although the official timeline for the Great Famine was from 1315 to 1322, the food supply only returned to its “normal” state in 1325 when the population in Western Europe began to increase again.

In the centuries which followed, Western Europe faced diseases and other events which led to natural occurrences of small scale food scarcities and famines. The 1590s saw the worst famines in centuries across all of Europe, except in certain areas, notably the Netherlands. The price of grain all over Europe was high, as was the population. Various types of people were vulnerable to the succession of bad harvests that occurred throughout the 1590s in different regions. The increasing number of wage laborers in the countryside were vulnerable because they had no food of their own, and their meager living was not enough to purchase the expensive grain of a bad-crop year. Town laborers were also at risk because their wages were insufficient to cover the cost of expensive grain, and, to make matters worse, they often received less money in bad-crop years since the disposable income of the wealthy was spent on grain. Often, unemployment would be the result of the increase in grain prices, leading to ever-increasing numbers of urban poor.

The Netherlands was able to escape most of the damaging effects of the famine, though the 1590s were still difficult years there. Actual famine did not occur, for the Amsterdam grain trade [with the Baltic] guaranteed that there would always be something to eat in the Netherlands although hunger was prevalent. The Netherlands had the most commercialized agriculture in all of Europe at this time, growing many industrial crops, such as flax, hemp, and hops. Agriculture became increasingly specialized and efficient. As a result, productivity and wealth increased, allowing the Netherlands to maintain a steady food supply. By the 1620s, the economy was even more developed, so the country was able to avoid the hardships of that period of famine with even greater impunity.

The years around 1620 saw another period of famines sweep across Europe. These famines were generally less severe than the famines of twenty-five years earlier, but they were nonetheless quite serious in many areas. Perhaps the worst famine since 1600, the great famine in Finland in 1696, killed a third of the population.

Other areas of Europe have known famines much more recently. A number of countries saw famines in the nineteenth century, and famine still occurred in eastern Europe during the twentieth century.

Iceland

In 1783 the volcano Laki in south-central Iceland erupted. The lava caused little direct damage, but ash and sulfur dioxide spewed out over most of the country, causing three-quarters of the island's livestock to perish. In the following famine, around ten thousand people died, one-fifth of the population of Iceland (Asimov 1984, 152-153).

Ireland

Famine Memorial in Dublin

The Irish Potato Famine of 1845-1849 began as a natural disaster but grew in severity due to social and political causes with the “actions and inactions” of the Whig government, headed by Lord John Russell. Divisions between Protestants and Catholics within British rule placed many restrictions on Irish Catholics. Under strictly enforced Penal Laws, Catholics, who were mostly Irish, were prevented from entering professions and from purchasing land. Along with it being illegal for Catholics to purchase land, it was also illegal for them to have an education, to speak or be taught in Gaelic, to hold office, vote, join the army, deal in trade, or practice their religion. Due to this form of discrimination, almost half the Irish population was forced to rent out small plots of land from “absentee British Protestant landlords.”

Depiction of victims of the Irish Potato Famine (1845–1849)

The peasants began to grow potatoes on their small plots of land as they could grow triple the amount of potatoes on the land compared to grain; an acre growing potato crops was able to feed a family for a year. It was estimated that about half of Ireland’s population was dependent on potatoes for survival and the crop provided approximately 60 percent of the nation’s food needs. In the summer of 1845, Ireland was struck with “potato blight” (Phytophthora infestans) and crops began to fail. Within six months there were large scale food shortages and by the following year, 1846, famine was a full grown epidemic throughout the land. Ironically in the initial year of the famine, although potato crops had failed, Ireland’s British lords were producing grain for export.

The Irish Potato Famine was the culmination of a social, biological, political, and economic catastrophe. In the colonial context of Ireland's domination by Britain, the root cause of the famine was perceived by many to be British policy. Certainly, the response of the British government was slow and inadequate. As diseases brought on by the famine worsened in the late 1840s, the British government began to implement changes to their laissez-faire economic policies and attempted to provide aid. By late 1847, soup kitchens and more grain began entering into Ireland, although they were poorly distributed and initially did very little to help.

The immediate after-effects of the famine continued until 1851. Much is unrecorded, but various estimates suggest that between five hundred thousand and more than 1 million people died in the years 1846 to 1849 as a result of hunger or disease. Also within a period of a decade, 1845-1855, it is estimated that close to two million people emigrated as a means to escape the devastations of the Irish Potato Famine.

Finland

The Finnish famine of 1866-1868 was the last famine in Finland and northern Sweden. In Finland the famine is known as "the great hunger years," or suuret nälkävuodet. About 15 percent of the entire population died; in the hardest-hit areas up to 20 percent. The total death toll was 270,000 in three years, about 150,000 in excess of normal mortality. The worst-hit areas were Satakunta, Tavastia, Ostrobothnia, and North Karelia.

The summer of 1866 was extremely rainy, and staple crops failed widely: potatoes and root vegetables rotted in the fields, and conditions for sowing grain in the autumn were unfavorable. When stored food ran out, thousands took to the roads to beg. The following winter was hard, and spring was late. In many places, lakes and rivers remained frozen until June. After a promisingly warm midsummer, freezing temperatures in early September ravaged crops; the harvest was about half the average. By the autumn of 1867, people were dying by the thousand. The weather returned to normal in 1868 and that year's harvest was somewhat better than average, but contagious diseases spread in the previous year killed many more.

Estonia

The Great Famine of Estonia (1695–1697) was responsible for the death of 70,000 to 75,000 people, approximately 20 percent of the population of what was at that time Swedish Estonia.

This famine resulted from unfavorable weather conditions which began in 1694. The summer of 1695 was cold and rainy, followed by an early autumn frost that destroyed the summer crops. Cold conditions continued during 1696, with significant rainfall throughout the summer. Starvation began to hit the population, with the weaker and poorer people dying during the winter. It was not until 1698 that sufficient food was produced to support the Estonian population.

Russia and USSR

Droughts and famines in Imperial Russia are known to have happened every 10 to 13 years, with average droughts happening every five to seven years. Famines continued in the Soviet era, the most famous one being the Holodomor in Ukraine (1932-1933) which also involved a significant part of the population of Russia.

The first famine in the USSR happened in 1921-1923 and garnered wide international attention. It was due to the Southern type of drought, the most affected area being the Southeastern areas of European Russia (including Volga area, or Povolzhye, especially national republics of Idel-Ural, and Ukraine.

The second Soviet famine happened during the collectivization in the USSR. In 1932-1933 confiscations of grain and other food by the Soviet authorities caused a famine which affected more than 40 million people, especially in the south on the Don and Kuban areas and in Ukraine, where by various estimates from 5 to 10 million may have starved to death in the event known as Holodomor (Fawkes 2006). About 200,000 Kazakh nomads fled to China, Iran, Mongolia, and Afghanistan during the famine.

The last major famine in the USSR happened in 1947 as a cumulative effect of consequences of collectivization, war damage, the severe drought in 1946 in over 50 percent of the grain-productive zone of the country, and government social policy and mismanagement of grain reserves. This led to an estimated 1 to 1.5 million excess deaths as well as to secondary population losses due to reduced fertility (Ellman 2000).

Famine today

Today, famine strikes African countries the hardest, but with ongoing wars, internal struggles, and economic instability, famine continues to be a worldwide problem with millions of individuals suffering.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) with emergency status in July of 2005, as well as Chad, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Somalia, and Zimbabwe. In January 2006, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization warned that 11 million people in Somalia, Kenya, Djibouti, and Ethiopia were in danger of starvation due to the combination of severe drought and military conflicts (FAO Newsroom, 2006)

In modern times, governments and non-governmental organizations that deliver famine relief have limited resources with which to address the multiple situations of food insecurity that are occurring simultaneously. Various methods of categorizing the gradations of food security have thus been used in order to most efficiently allocate food relief. One of the earliest were the Indian Famine Codes devised by the British in the 1880s. The Codes listed three stages of food insecurity: near-scarcity, scarcity and famine, and were highly influential in the creation of subsequent famine warning or measurement systems. The early warning system developed to monitor the region inhabited by the Turkana people in northern Kenya also has three levels, but links each stage to a pre-planned response to mitigate the crisis and prevent its deterioration.

Since 2004, many of the most important organizations in famine relief, such as the World Food Programme and the U.S. Agency for International Development, have adopted a five-level scale measuring intensity and magnitude. The intensity scale uses both livelihoods' measures and measurements of mortality and child malnutrition to categorize a situation.

Many believe that the Green Revolution is the answer to famine. The Green Revolution began in the twentieth century with hybrid strains of high-yielding crops. Not only does this contribute to a larger amount of the crop, but it can also stabilize production and these crops can be bred as to adapt to the conditions of the country. These high-yielding crops make it technically possible to feed the world and eliminate famine. Some criticize the process, however, stating that these new high-yielding crops require more chemical fertilizers and pesticides, which can harm the environment.

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External Links

All links retrieved March 23, 2024.


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