Poverty and famines an essay on entitlement and deprivation
Material type:
TextPublication details: New York Oxford University Press 1981Description: ix, 257 p. : ill. ; 22 cmISBN: - 0198284268
- 363.8SEN
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dar es Salaam | 363.8SEN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 000248 |
Includes indexes, Bibiliography (217-249)
The main focus of this book is on the causation of starvation in general and of famines in particular. The traditional analysis of famines focusing on food supply, is shown to be fundamentally defective-theoretically unsound, empirically inept, and dangerously misleading for policy. The author develops an alternative method of analysis--the 'the entitlement approach'- concentrating on ownership and exchange. Aside from developing the underlying theory, the approach is used in a number of case studies of recent famines, including the great Bengal Famine of i943, the Ethiopian famines of 1973 and 1974, the Bangladesh famine of 1974 and the famines inn the Sahel countries in Africa in the seventies. The book also provides a general analysis of the characterisation and measurement of poverty. Various approaches used in economics, sociology and political theory are critically examined. The predominance of distributuional issues,including distribution between different occupation groups, links up the problem of conceptualizing poverty with that of analysing starvation. While technical economic analysis is to some extent unavoidable for a work of this kind, the text of the book has been kept as informal as possible, and technicalities and mathematical reasoning are confined to the appendices. The text is accessible to the non-technical reader, who can easily follow the main lines of reasoning and their applications to the case studies.
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