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Go to cartISBN: 9789386385826
Bind: Paperback
Year: 2017
Pages: 322
Size: 5.5 x 8.5 Inch
Publisher: Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
Published in India by: Viva Books
Exclusive Distributors: Viva Books
Sales Territory: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Bhutan
"Authoritatively and clearly explains the complexities of the international food aid regime and the World Food Programme."
-H. Wayne Moyer, Grinnell College
"Ross makes an important contribution to the literature on food aid and the fight against hunger, and he provides an in-depth insight into a side of the World Food Programme that is not often seen."
-Daniel Maxwell, Tufts University
Description:
How has the World Food Programme come to be so well-regarded-even in the US-despite being part of the much-maligned UN system? What are the political and institutional conditions that have enabled it to accrue legitimacy as an international organization? And how much substance lies behind the perceptions of its effectiveness?
Finding the answers to these questions in his analysis of the institutional politics of the WFP, Sandy Ross illustrates important larger issues about international institutions and global governance. He also shows that the very terms of its success limit the WFP?s capacity to change the systemic problems that generate large-scale global hunger.
Target Audience:
People interested in agriculture, nutrition & food and economics.
Contents:
List of Tables and Charts
Acknowledgement
Chapter 1: The World Food Programme in the International System
Chapter 2: The Feed-the-Hungry Norm
Chapter 3: Development of the Food Aid Regime
Chapter 4: The Evolution of the World Food Programme
Chapter 5: Inclusion and Accountability
Chapter 6: Effectiveness
Chapter 7: Feeding the Hungry
List of Acronyms
Appendixes:
1. UN General Assembly Resolution 1714
2. FAO Principles of Surplus Disposal
3. Statement by George S. McGovern, 10 April 1961
4. The WFP Mission Statement
Bibliography
Index
About the Authors:
Sandy Ross is research fellow in the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne.