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Combating hunger
THE POLITICS OF HUNGER IN INDIA - A Study of Democracy,
Governance and Kalahandi's Poverty: Bob Currie; Macmillan India
Ltd., 21, Patullos Road, Chennai-600002. Price not mentioned.
A COMMON assumption in many contemporary contributions on welfare
politics is that the lifeguard's responsibilities lie with the
elected government in modern electoral political systems. This
study has noted their responsibility for relief and welfare
administration in India are rarely the concern of elected
government alone. Instead public policy in these spheres
functions more commonly through the nexus of a wider network of
actors, including government departments, non-governmental
organisations, private contractors, community organisations and
other agencies. This book queries, ``Do people starve in
democratic polities?'' and in an attempt to provide the answer,
it seeks to identify the processes which generate and perpetuate
hunger in India, and what sort of intentions by public and
private agencies are best suited to combat this problem. This
research draws on field work conducted in Orissa between 1992 and
1999.
Bob Currie, Lecturer in Development Politics at Hudersfield
University, U.K., explains why problems of poverty and alleged
starvation remain despite regular elections and extensive
regional and national publicity.
The book consists of eight chapters, organised into two parts.
Chapter one provides the introduction that opens up the question.
' Chapter two examines the relevance of political association for
promoting security and well-being through a study of major
theoretical contributions and policy statements.
The next chapter attempts to look beyond the narrow focus on
formal institutional structures to explore how policy performance
in the welfare sector is influenced not only by institutions,
procedures and political events, but also by the beliefs, values
and expectations that these generate in those participating in
them.
In the second part, chapter four analyses the historical
development of patterns of hunger, starvation and extreme poverty
in Kalahandi and Nawapada. It also examines the evolution of
structures of authority and power that have shaped people's
access to food and other essentials; and explores the degree to
which civil association and collective action have served to
protect public welfare in these study districts.
Chapter five examines codified procedures in the Orissa Relief
Code that specify how government officers should assist the
public during times of emergency. Chapter six explores the
practical functioning of relief and welfare operations maintained
by the Government of Orissa in Nawapada and Kalahandi. The next
chapter examines more fully the process of and outcomes of this
critical evaluation of public policy in the laws of court, in
news media and in political debate in parliamentary and non-
parliamentary forum.
The next chapter draws broader policy implications from this
discussion. Providing extensive analytical and statistical data,
this book is of great value to social workers and policy makers
in the field of social welfare.
GEORGINA PETER
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