Resilience to famine ca. 600 BC-present: an introduction
Jessica Dijkman and Bas van Leeuwen
1.Central issue
2.Theories and concepts
3.Famine resilience in historical research
4.Some general patterns
Part I Premodern world
2.Responses to food shortages in core regions of antiquity compared
Bas van Leeuwen and Jieli Li
1.Introduction
2.The nature of famines in core regions
3.Societal resilience
4.Concluding comparison
1.Political, social and economic determinants of responses to food crises in the early Roman empire
Luuk de Ligt
1.Introduction
2.Famines and food shortages in the Roman world
3.The food supply of the city of Rome
4.Intervention by provincial governors
5.The role of free trade in resolving urban food crises
6.Public institutions and private benefactors
7.Benefactors, public grain-buyers and the grain market
8.Conclusions
3.Feeding the hungry: Poor relief and famine in northwestern Europe, 1500-1700
Jessica Dijkman
1.Introduction
2.Southeastern England
3.The northwestern Low Countries
4.Northwestern France
5.Conclusions
4.Inca responses to environmental hazards in the capital region and provinces
R. Alan Covey
1.Introduction
2.Andean hazards and food supplies
3.Inca state interventions in the Cuzco region
4.Inca state intervention in provincial regions
5.Conclusions
5.Coping with famines in Ottoman Anatolia (1650-1850)
Semih Çelik
1.Introduction
2."There is famine everywhere; no bread to eat" - Bread prices and chronology of famines in Anatolia (1650-1850)
3.Crises in detail
4.Flight, migration and settlement pattern changes
5.Changes in economic activities
6."If you are subjects of the sultan, so are we!" - Politics of famine resilience
7."What do you mean by hunger?" - Politics of famine resilience
8.Conclusion
Part II Modern world
1.Whose famine? Regional differences in vulnerability and resilience during the 1840s potato famine in Belgium
Esther Beeckaert and Eric Vanhaute
1.The 1840s potato famine: la misère des Flandres
2.Methodology and sources
3.Land use and the impact of the crop failures
4.Land holding systems and rural income systems
5.Village politics and local poor relief
6.Whose famine? Explaining the differential vulnerability to a food crisis
6.The integration of food markets and increasing government intervention in colonial Indonesia: 1815 - 1980s
Ulbe Bosma
1.Introduction
2.Food self-sufficiency and colonial cash crop production
3.Dysfunctional rice markets and precarity (1850-1900)
4.Government intervention under the Ethical Policy (1900-1930)
5.The Depression years: Towards Indonesian rice self-sufficiency
6.The Republic of Indonesia under Sukarno
7.Suhartos central coordination: Bulog
8.Conclusion
1.Famine, relief and the rhetoric of welfare in colonial North India
Sanjay Sharma
1.Introduction
2.Indigenous Charity: Norms and Practices
3.Colonial Famine Relief and its characterization of 'Native Charity
4.Regulating Alms-Giving and Beggary: Poorhouses and Philanthropy
5.The Colonial State turns Philanthropic: Claims and Legacies
1.Societal responses to food shortages and famine in Russia and China
S.G. Wheatcroft
1.Introduction
2.China and Russia in the periods in which they coped well with food problems
3.China and Russia in their times of troubles - ongoing critical food crises and famines
4.Russia and China in the periods of crash reconstruction, attempts to escape from crisis and denial of famine
5.Conclusion
1.Preventable famines: response and coordination failures in 21st century famines
Stephen Devereux
1.Introduction
2.Ethiopia 1999-2000
3.Malawi 2001-2002
4.Niger 2005
5.Somalia 2011
6.Discussion
7.Conclusion
Part III Long-run perspectives
1.Centralized vs. decentralized: Dealing with famines in China and Poland (a long-term analysis)
Meimei Wang, Piotr Korys and Maciej Tyminski
1.Introduction
2.Societal responses to drops in food supply in China
3.Societal responses to drops in food supply in Poland
4.Conclusions
1.The final straw that broke the camels back: famine and migration, a global exploration
Leo Lucassen
1.Introduction
2.Defining famine and migration
3.Acute food crises and migration
4.Chronic undernourishment and migration
5.Conclusion