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In modern times, Ethiopia has suffered three grievous famines, two
of which-in 1973-74 and in 1984-85-caught the world's attention. It
is often assumed that population increase drove Ethiopia's farmers
to overexploit their environment and thus undermine the future of
their own livelihoods, part of a larger global process of
deforestation. In Farming and Famine, Donald E. Crummey explores
and refutes these claims based on his research in Wallo province,
an epicenter of both famines. Crummey draws on photographs
comparing identical landscapes in 1937 and 1997 as well as
interviews with local farmers, among other sources. He reveals that
forestation actually increased due to farmers' tree-planting
initiatives. More broadly, he shows that, in the face of growing
environmental stress, Ethiopian farmers have innovated and adapted.
Yet the threat of famine remains because of constricted access to
resources and erratic rainfall. To avoid future famines, Crummey
suggests, Ethiopia's farmers must transform agricultural
productivity, but they cannot achieve that on their own.
In From Poverty to Famine in Northeast Ethiopia, James McCann
engages an interdisciplinary perspective to uncover the historical
background to the persistence of famine in the northeast region of
Ethiopia. His study focuses on the northern Wallo region, an area
that was incorporated into Haile Selassie's modern state system and
now one of the most devastated portions of the country. The history
of northern Wallo and its position within the modern Ethiopian
state is presented through an examination of the circumstances in
which its rural population lived, farmed, and adapted to a changing
physical environment and political economy between 1900 and 1935.
This period also coincided with the most critical years of colonial
Africa's incorporation into the world economy. McCann's employment
of new field data calls into question previous studies of Africa,
which have frequently identified ecological stress and famine as
simply the products of capitalist development. What accounts for
rural Ethiopia's vulnerability to famine, when it boasts one of
Africa's most efficient traditional agricultural systems? To what
extent have northern Ethiopian patterns of property, marriage, and
ideology resisted or contributed to the overall impoverishment of
the rural economy? The answers to these questions are found in
McCann's careful examination of the historical, geographic,
ecological, and demographic characteristics that have affected
northern Wallo's systems of production. This comprehensive
description of northern Wallo's historical experience is also
instructive in terms of the nature of social change and continuity,
and the persistence of famine throughout northern Ethiopia. From
Poverty to Famine in Northeastern Ethiopia< will be of interest
to students and scholars of African history, politics, and current
affairs, and anthropologists.
Verbatim Report Of A Three Night's Debate Between The Rev. Dr.
McCann And Charles Bradlaugh.
Verbatim Report Of A Three Night's Debate Between The Rev. Dr.
McCann And Charles Bradlaugh.
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