Feeding the World in the 21st Century: Exploring the Connections between Food Production, Health, Environmental Resources, and International Security
CISAC, FSI Stanford, FSE Project (Completed)2006-2009
Researchers
Stephen J. Stedman - Stanford University
Rosamond L. Naylor - Stanford University
James D. Fearon - Stanford University
Gary K. Schoolnik
Paul H. Wise - Stanford University
Jeremy M. Weinstein - Stanford University
Andrew Mack - Director, Human Security Center, Univ. British Columbia
Walter P. Falcon - Stanford University
Marshall Burke - Stanford University
David S. Battisti - University of Washington
This project involves political scientists, economists, and medical researchers to address the question of whether hunger, poverty, disease and agricultural resource constraints foster civil conflict and international terrorism. Economists have elucidated the links between agricultural stagnation, poverty, and food insecurity, and political scientists have empirically analyzed the role of poverty in facilitating civil conflict. To date there has been virtually no work bringing the two perspectives together, nor in exploring their connection to infectious disease and dwindling environmental resources. This project seeks to establish the empirical and policy linkages between the approaches, with the goals of reducing poverty, disease, and violent conflict.
Completed seminars exploring such "deadly connections" include:
- Jeremy Weinstein, Political Science, Stanford University
Talk title: "AIDS, Security, and Social Stability" - Ted Miguel, Economics, Berkeley
Talk title: "Spring Cleaning: A Randomized Evaluation of Source Water Quality Improvement" - Colin Kahl, Political Science, Georgetown
Talk title: "States, Scarcity, and Civil Strife in the Developing World" - Macartan Humphreys, Political Science, Columbia (CISAC Visiting Fellow)
Talk title: "Poverty and Rebel Recruitment in Liberia's Civil War" - David Battisti, Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington
Talk title: "Climate change in conflict-prone countries"
Contact
Kaitlin Shilling
Funding provided by
• FSI
• Stanford's Presidential Fund for International Studies



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