Food Security: Let Them Eat Information

Organisation: Institute of Development Studies
Publish Date: 1994
Country: Africa
Sector: Education
Method: Creative thinking
Theme: Food
Type: Report
Language: English
Tags: Information generation, Knowledge, Knowledge flows, Economic values, Famine warnings, Famine prevention
Improved capacity to predict drought-induced famines has not led to a concomitant improvement in famine prevention. In a comparative study of five African countries, this article argues that the failure to translate more information into timely and appropriate response is explained by a myriad of institutional and – crucially – political obstacles. It is often negotiation over conflicting interests between donors and governments of recipient countries which determines the timing and level of famine response; the role of information becomes peripheral to much of the decision-making process. Policy implications of the study include better pre-planning of response and decentralisation of response capacity, as well as joint ventures between donors and governments to provide – and hence own – early warning information.
Located in: Resources