Whose fault is famine? Starvation in the face of plenty

Mon, 05/03/2012 - 18:30 - 21:00
Regular event?: 
This is not a regular event
Town/City: 
London
Postcode: 
EC1M 6EL

Speaker Dr David Nally. Today, an estimated 10 million people are facing starvation across a vast swathe of Africa including Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda, and in some areas a child is dying every 6 minutes. Yet hunger is not a natural disaster; it is a human-induced problem that demands political solutions. Fewer than 170 years ago, a similarly terrible famine occurred within the British Isles, then an integral part of the United Kingdom and thus a constituent of the most economically advanced region in the world. From an Irish population of about 9 million, 1 million perished and a further 2 million emigrated in what became known as An Gorta Mór or The Great Hunger. Cambridge lecturer Dr David Nally, whose book Human Encumbrances: Political Viiolence and the Great Irish Famine was published this year by the University of Notre Dame Press, will discuss the historical causes of famine, with a particular focus on the similarities between the Irish famine and those of the present day.

Organised by: 
Friends of Le Monde Diplomatique
Member: 
Organiser is an NFP member
Venue: 
Café Diplo at The Gallery, 70/77 Cowcross Street, London EC1M 6EL.
Contact: 
07984 178 193
Wheelchair Accessibility: 
yes