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Famine and Foreigners: Ethiopia since Live Aid [Hardcover]

Peter Gill (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 8, 2010
The Ethiopian famine of 25 years ago was the greatest humanitarian disaster of the late 20th century, killing more than 600,000 people before the world took notice. Peter Gill was the first journalist to reach the epicenter of the famine in 1984 and he returned at the time of Live Aid to research the definitive account of the disaster, A Year in the Death of Africa.

Now, in Famine and Foreigners, Gill returns to Ethiopia to piece together the real story of the last 25 years, drawing on interviews with leading Ethiopians and with an army of foreign aid officials. He conducted extensive interviews with Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and the leading development economists, Joseph E. Stiglitz and Jeffrey Sachs. Most important of all, Gill has traveled throughout the country and interviewed scores of Ethiopia's dignified but still hungry farmers. What stands out in these pages are the graphic encounters with these Ethiopians--the supposed beneficiaries of western aid--who still struggle on the knife-edge of existence. What also emerges is the often tense relationship between official aid-givers and recipients--whether in the area of economic reform or the modern demands for "governance" and political change. Twenty five years on, we can say that we did feed the world. But did we change the face of poverty, did we close the gap between rich and poor, did we fulfill the promise of "development?"

A generation after Live Aid, this book questions whether any of world's big promises are being fulfilled. Have aid experts got it right? Are recipient countries allowed to pursue their own vision? Is democracy essential for banishing poverty? Now that the West faces its own economic challenges, it is time to ask whether the "development era" may be coming to an end.

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Famine and Foreigners: Ethiopia since Live Aid + The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good + Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa
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Editorial Reviews

Review


"Well-turned account of the country's miseries since the 1984-85 famine and the Live Aid concert meant to relieve it" -- Wall Street Journal


"Well-written and accessible book"--The Economist


"Valuable"--David Rieff, The New Republic


"Thank God for great journalism. This book is a much needed, exhaustively researched and effortlessly well written recent history of Ethiopia. A book that strips away the cant and rumour, the pros and antis and thoroughly explains the people, politics and economics of that most beautiful nation. A superb and vital piece of work by someone who clearly loves the country of which he writes."--Bob Geldof


"Judicious analysis and a strong narrative. A must for all those who think there is a simple answer to the famine."--Michael Buerk


"The essential book on Ethiopia, the world's crucible for hunger and poverty, and on development theory and practice."--Alex de Waal


"No outsider understands Ethiopia better than Peter Gill. He combines compassion with a clinical commitment to the truth."--Jonathan Dimbleby


"Well-written and accessible book"--The Economist


"Valuable"--David Rieff, The New Republic


"Excellent" -- William Easterly, New York Review of Books


About the Author


Peter Gill is a veteran journalist who has covered the developing world for most of his career. He has is author of Drops in the Ocean, A Year in the Death of Africa, and Body Count.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (September 8, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199569843
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199569847
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.7 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #843,968 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3.0 out of 5 stars Food for thought -- but never enough of it, August 11, 2011
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C. Lindsey (San Jose, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Famine and Foreigners: Ethiopia since Live Aid (Hardcover)
An illuminating report from a beat reporter whose beat is Ethiopian famine. I benefited from Gill's knowledge of the peoples, politicians, and geography of Ethiopia, and his dogged attempts to be fair to almost all sides. I say "almost" because he offered neither wisdom nor fairness toward anything American, governmental or otherwise, and because he obviously had his pet charities (whose rivals had little or no room to respond). Moreover, what hooked me into buying this book was the chance of a follow-up on the whole global charity phenomenon that surged in the 1980s: what did it leave behind? Is it still active in Ethiopia? Can I look inside its 21st-century progeny? How did it change (or not) westerners' desire to help the hungry, how did it spawn compassion fatigue, did it eventually shake off charity dilettantism or is that plague still with us?

Gill has a fine sense of irony, so it was disappointing to spot the places where he didn't employ it. As in his efforts to parse the Meles government and its progress toward feeding people, reforms and techniques and strategies and so on, without once confronting the question of whether this is a land that could EVER feed itself, and if not, what the clear-eyed response should be. Maybe a country that endlessly perfects its ways of collecting and channeling aid from better-fed countries is not actually solving its problem. What could Ethiopia do, anyway, to bear itself up in a globalized world? Should we make a fetish of these scrawny, unreliable, tiny farms and their inevitable seasonal failures, or does Ethiopia need an injection of something entirely different that could pull it into the world economy? Is Ethiopian subsistence -- spotty subsistence -- enough for us all to feel smug and happy about what we've helped bring about there? Wouldn't we want more for ourselves?

Moreover, Gill gets contraception backward: it's not an investment used to cut down the number of hungry mouths (western reductionism) but a technique that people will adopt AFTER their livelihoods become more secure. That's been shown. Family planning is the cart, prosperity the horse. "Feed the World" still echoes in my head from that dreck 1980s ballad. "Feed Ethiopia's future, and thus its prosperity, and thus its people" is presumably not as much of a hook.

Interesting to watch the news today. Famine is once more raging in these barren lands, and nothing at all has been solved.
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