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Feeding Africa: A Dissent from Development
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2021
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The population of Africa is roughly estimated to be 300,000,000 and believed to be growing at a very high rate, perhaps as much as 3 percent per annum. If these figures are accurate, Africa will have a population of over one-half billion by the year 2000. In light of this prospect, a question asked more from desperation than curiosity is whether these millions can all be fed, at least enough to avert mass starvation and pandemic malnutrition. Paul Ehrlich and others have argued it is not possible. “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970’s the world will undergo famine, hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death.”
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- Copyright © African Studies Association 1978
References
NOTES
1. Erlich, Paul, The Population Bomb (New York: Bailamme Books, 1968)Google Scholar, quoted in Bodley, John H., Anthropology and Contemporary Human Problems (Menlo Park: Cummings, 1976), p. 83 Google Scholar.
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5. McLoughlin, African Food Production Systems, p. 25.
6. Uchendu, “Anthropology and Agricultural Development,” quoted in McLoughlin, p. 25.
7. See for example Southworth, Herman M. and Johnston, Bruce F., eds., Agricultural Development and Economic Growth (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1967)Google Scholar; de Wilde, John C., Experiences with Agricultural Development in Tropical Africa (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1967)Google Scholar; Johnston, Bruce F. and Kilby, Peter, Agriculture and Structural Transformation (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975)Google Scholar.
8. The figures are taken from Bodley, Anthropology and Contemporary Human Problems, p. 119.
9. These points are elaborated compellingly in Odum, Howard T., Environment, Power, and Society (New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inter-Science, 1971)Google Scholar, and John, S. and Steinhart, Carol E., “Energy Use in the U. S. Food System,” Science, 184 (1974), 307–316 Google Scholar.
10. Bodley, Anthropology and Contemporary Human Problems, pp. 120–121.
11. Bodley, p. 121.
12. Bodley, pp. 122-123.