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Uniform Title Niger 2005, une catastrophe si naturelle. English.
Title A not-so natural disaster : Niger 2005 / editors, Xavier Crombe and Jean-Herve Jezequel
Published New York : Columbia University Press, 2009

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  363.8096626 Cro/Nsn  AVAILABLE
Description xi, 228 pages : illustrations, map ; 23 cm
Contents Introduction / Xavier Crombe and Jean-Herve Jezequel -- Pt. I. The Politics of Crisis -- 1. Consensus Reloaded? Niger's Crisis and Food Security in Policy and Practice / Jean-Herve Jezequel -- 2. Famine or Food Crisis ? Views from Niger's Political Scene / Mamoudou Gazibo -- 3. Building the Case for Emergency: MSF and the Malnutrition Factor / Xavier Crombe -- Pt. II. Contexts -- 4. We Aren't the World: the Institutional Production of Partial Success / Kent Glenzer -- 5. The Paradox of Chronic Aid / Benedetta Rossi -- 6. De-feminization of Agriculture in Southern Niger: a Link with the Crisis? / Marthe Diarra and Marie Monimart -- 7. Chronic Malnutritional and the Trope of the Bad Mother / Barbara M. Cooper -- Pt. III. Making Children Live -- 8. Operational Innovation in Practice: MSF's Programme Against Malnutrition in Maradi (2001-2007) / Isabelle Defourny -- 9. Treating Malnutrition: New Issues and Challenges / Andre Briend
Postscript - Niger 2005: the Year of the Biscuit / Jean-Herve Bradol
Summary Although the term 'natural disaster' applies to the December 2004 tsunami, the images of huge devastation that were televised after the tragedy probably seemed a good deal less 'natural' to us than those of starving African children we saw seven months later, from Niger. The tsunami was perceived as so 'un-natural' that it provoked an immediate, unprecedented international outpouring of sympathy. It took many months, by contrast, for the story of a new famine in the Sahel to make headlines. From the outset its causes were apparent in media coverage-droughts and locust invasions have always seemed the everyday lot of people living in this region. The link between the crisis and its natural causes was so self-evident that the first news reports tended to omit the point that, in reality, drought and the locust invasion had overtaken the Sahel region a year earlier. Nevertheless it became Medecins Sans Frontieres' aim to see it acknowledged-not in the press, but among those institutions responsible for food security in Niger-that the deaths of tens of thousands of children as a result of malnutrition would not be considered 'natural' phenomenon, still less a normal one. For this reason the 2005 crisis was a unique experience for the humanitarian organization. MSF treated more than 60,000 children suffering from severe malnutrition-one of the most ambitious operations in its history. It also found itself embroiled in controversy among the various national and international actors involved in managing the crisis in Niger over the summer of 2005. At the very moment MSF was straining to mobilise other actors to intervene in what it judged to be an emergency situation, the NGO was undergoing heated argument and intense inquiry as to the exact nature of the situation it was attempting to manage. Public, operational involvement of this kind - outside the conflict zones where MSF traditionally and typically intervenes, moreover - called for some form of reflection. This book makes no claim whatsoever to be comprehensive, or to provide a final, definitive version of 'the truth' with respect to the 2005 famine in Niger. Instead the contributors endeavor to shed new light on a multifaceted crisis
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Famines -- Niger.
Food relief -- Niger.
Food supply -- Niger -- International cooperation.
Food supply -- Niger.
Malnutrition -- Niger.
SUBJECT Niger http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79065240 -- Economic conditions -- 21st century. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2002011408
Author Crombé, Xavier.
Jézéquel, Jean-Hervé.
LC no. 2009003309
ISBN 9780231154369 (alk. paper)