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he United Nations
announced in May that while globally there are 200 million fewer hungry people
than there were 25 years ago, twice as many African countries are now suffering
food crises.
Moreover, Pacific islanders’ access to sanitation facilities
is declining, and just over half of that population has potable water. When it
comes to the world’s food and water, the question remains of power and
agency—who gets to control the resources on which human survival depends.
Former U.N. special rapporteur Olivier De Schutter challenges
the agency’s claim on hunger, stating that numbers, if anything, have remained
steady and explains why local responses, not solely international actions, will
defeat hunger. Charles Fishman, author of The Big Thirst, asserts that slaking
a parched planet requires collective pragmatism, even cooperation among
adversaries. Climate change demands that humankind be nourished more
sustainably; figuring out whose responsibility this is won’t be easy. But it is
crucial.
Read the story - “Starving for Answers.”
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