Political History of American Food Aid

Political History of American Food Aid

An Uneasy Benevolence

Riley, Barry (Visiting Scholar, Visiting Scholar, Center on Food Security and the Environment, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University)

Oxford University Press Inc

11/2017

592

Dura

Inglês

9780190228873

15 a 20 dias

The Political History of American Food Aid provides a profound understanding of the complex factors influencing American food aid policy and a foundation for examining its historical relationship with relief, economic development, food security and its possible future in a world confronting the effects of global climate change.
Preface Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One: The Early Episodes: 1794-1914 Chapter Two: Herbert Hoover Chapter Three: "...but now came Famine and Pestilence..." Chapter Four: Between the Wars Chapter Five: Interlude: The American Farmer Chapter Six: The Birth, Short Life, and Early Death of the UNRRA Chapter Seven: Harry Truman, European Hunger and the Cold War Chapter Eight: The Marshall Plan Era Chapter Nine: Public Law 480 Chapter Ten: The Politics of Food Surpluses Chapter Eleven: Kennedy: Food Aid and Economic Development Chapter Twelve: Lyndon Johnson's Food Aid Battles Chapter Thirteen: LBJ, India and the Short Tether Chapter Fourteen: The Nixon Years: Two Case Studies Chapter Fifteen: A Global Food Crisis Chapter Sixteen: The World Food Conference Chapter Seventeen: Food Aid Under Carter and Reagan Chapter Eighteen: The Search for Food Security Chapter Nineteen: The Ethiopia Conundrum Chapter Twenty: From Food Aid to Food Assistance: 1990-2014 Chapter Twenty-One: Change...and Resisting Change Bibliography
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