ABSTRACT

The world food crisis (1972–1975) gave rise to new development concepts. To eradicate world hunger, small peasants were supposed to use ‘modern’ inputs like high-yielding seeds, fertilizer, pesticides and irrigation. This would turn subsistence producers into business owners, transform rural areas, invigorate national economies and the crisis-stricken world economy and thus stabilize capitalism.

Together with an in-depth account of the world food crisis, this book analyses how this global scheme largely failed. It shows its diverse initiators, their reasoning and motives, its political breakthrough, the degrees to which it was implemented globally and nationally in the following decades and its socioeconomic effects in rural areas. Despite internationally coordinated policies and coercive means, the scheme failed on all levels: situation analysis, design, policies, incapable institutions (including big business), implementation and peasants’ responses. Selective realization in certain regions and for certain crops and the appropriation of funds by local elites often aggravated inequality and hunger. Case studies are about Bangladesh, Indonesia, Tanzania and Mali. The book shows limits to global social engineering, imperialism and state control.

It is aimed at students, scholars, activists and non-specialists interested in development and the world food problem.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

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part |195 pages

The global level

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chapter 3|42 pages

A global wave of famines

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chapter 4|44 pages

The small peasant approach to combatting hunger and rural poverty

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Ideas and breakthrough
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chapter 5|24 pages

Degrees of implementation

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Global perspectives
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chapter 6|51 pages

Unexpected limits to growth

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The spread of capital and technology
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part |233 pages

Case studies

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chapter 7|67 pages

Bangladesh

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Impoverishment, hunger and credit
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chapter 8|60 pages

Indonesia

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Limits to farming intensification and poverty alleviation
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chapter 9|65 pages

Tanzania

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Impoverishment after enforced villagization
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chapter 10|39 pages

Mali

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Changes in the neglected drylands
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part |68 pages

General observations

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chapter 11|21 pages

Comparing the case studies

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chapter 12|21 pages

Projections and predictions

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Imaginations of the future
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chapter 13|10 pages

An "effective utilization of women"

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chapter 14|14 pages

The bigger picture

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