This volume explores how famine and mass starvation in our lifetime are the result of man-made policies, and invariably occur during times of armed conflict. It provides expert analysis on defining starvation, early warning systems, gender and mass starvation, the use of sanctions, reporting on, and memory of famine.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Bridget Conley, Alex de Waal, Catriona Murdoch, and Wayne Jordash: Introduction
- Part I: The Historical and Conceptual Context
- 2: Bridget Conley and Alex de Waal: What is Starvation?
- 3: Susanne Jaspars: Social Nutrition and Accountability for Mass Starvation
- 4: Bridget Conley, Randle Defalco, Senai Abraha, and Alex de Waal: 'An Unprosecuted Crime'
- Part II: The Law
- 5: Wayne Jordash, Catriona Murdoch, and Joe Holmes: A Comprehensive Review of Existing IHL and ICL As It Relates to Starvation
- 6: Simone Hutter: The Right to Food in Armed Conflict
- Part III: The Case for Prosecutions Today
- 7: Chris Newton: 'Not Never Again, but Next Time': Armed Conflict and Mass Starvation in South Sudan 2013-2019
- 8: Mohammad Kanfash and Ali Aljasem: Starvation as Strategy in the Syrian Armed Conflict: Siege, Deprivation, and Detention
- 9: Aditya Sarkar: 'Once We Control Them, We Will Feed Them': Mass Starvation in Yemen
- 10: Wayne Jordash and Uzay Yasar Aysev: Prosecution of Starvation in South Sudan
- Part IV: Broader Perspectives
- 11: Dan Maxwell: Humanitarian Challenges and Implications for Famine Early Warning Systems
- 12: Ben Spatz, Catriona Murdoch, and Olivier Windridge: Sanctions as a Mechanism for Accountability for Starvation Crimes
- 13: Dyan Mazurana, Bridget Conley, and Kinsey Spears: Sex, Gender, Age, and Mass Starvation
- 14: Jane Ferguson: Reporting Famine
- 15: Alex de Waal: Truth, Memory, and Victims