DV467      Half Unit
Famine, Data skills and Analysis

This information is for the 2024/25 session.

Teacher responsible

Prof Stuart Gordon (CON.8.02)

Availability

This course is available on the MSc in International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies. This course is not available as an outside option.

Course content

This half unit course is intended to provide students with an opportunity to develop industry standard data handling skills and apply these techniques to real world case studies of food insecurity and famine.

Students will complete two digital skills laboratory courses (these are each about five days long) and to use these skills to conduct an independent exploration of data sets relating to the onset of famines.  Using the food security literature to identify a range of processes and pathways thought to lead into or out of famine, students are asked to interrogate existing data sets and represent their findings as either confirming or altering these models through inductive inference.  The data sets are likely to derive from those provided by OCHA Humanitarian Data Exchange, FEWSNET, Development Initiatives, the OCHA Financial Tracking Service, Glofass and supported by data from relevant operational organisations (such as WFP, UNICEF and FAO as well as national capitals). Students can work independently or in teams of two or three (but with different outputs). This course will appeal to those wishing to pursue a career in combatting food insecurity.

The causes of famine are generally considered to be found in widespread food scarcity which may derive from a range of factors: crop failure, natural disaster, armed conflict, chronic poverty or the failure of national political or economic policies.  Famines ‘that kill’ (De Waal) are usually followed by ‘regional malnutrition, starvation, epidemic, and increased mortality.’  The onset of these type of events can be slow or fast but the more serious episodes tend to be ones that develop over a protracted period and are complex social and economic processes. Many of these processes are tracked by international organisations and national capitals and these data sets provide a rich and often untapped description of underlying processes and the various ways in which these situations unfold over time as the crisis deepens and broadens.

The corpus of literature identifies a range of supposedly causal pathways; but four particular models stand out. Historically the Malthusian idea of sharp and sudden ‘food availability decline’ has tended to dominate analysis. But following the work of Amartya Sen in the early 1980s, authors have identified a range of other processes ranging from the collapse of household ‘entitlements’, through to patterns of progressive impoverishment, and narratives which focus on reductions in access to livelihoods and food, resulting first in displacement and then chronic public health crises. Equally the pathways out of famine have become more sophisticated; beginning with the provision of food commodities and water during throughout much of the Cold War but eventually evolving into far more complex livelihood, market based and food security interventions thereafter. The course will explore the various claims made by theorists in order to determine ‘frames’ for considering the evolution of such crises.

Teaching

6 hours of seminars and 3 hours of workshops in the AT. 3 hours of workshops in the WT.

2 x curated workshop courses from DSL (drawn from Power BI, STATA, R, Python, Tableau, Excel with individual advice to students on aspirations and suitability of courses from DSL - these vary in length but are approx. 5 days each). Plus, one 3 hour inception report presentations session in AT.

Final presentations in WT.

Formative coursework

Students will be expected to produce 1 presentation in the AT.

Formative work with DSL.

Formative assessment – presentation in AT (identifies digital platforms being used, selection of data sets, causal pathways to be explored). Autumn Term worth 5% of overall grade. Problem solving workshops 2 X 90 minutes each in WT.

Indicative reading

  • Alex de Waal, Catriona Murdoch and Wayne Jordash (eds.), Accountability for Mass Starvation: Testing the Limits of the Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1-30.
  • Stephen Devereux, 2000, Famine in the Twentieth Century, IDS working paper no. 105, pp1-40. ISBN 1 85864 292 2
  • Becker, Jasper. 1996. Hungry Ghosts: China’s Secret Famine. London: John Murray (chapter 8: “Henan: A Catastrophe of Lies”).
  • Natsios, Andrew. 2001. “The Politics of Famine: The Battle in Washington”, chapter 7 in The Great North Korean Famine, Washington: United States Institute of Peace, pp. 141-164.
  • Delamothe, Tony, 2011, “Thought for food: Commodity speculation, not micronutrient deficiency, is today’s most pressing problem”, BMJ (British Medical Journal), 342, p. 1060, May 14.)
  • Sen, Amartya 1981. Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, Oxford: Clarendon Press (reprinted 1984) (chapters 1 and 9) CC HC79.F3S47 pp1-8 & 131–153
  • Rangasami, Amrita. 1985. “’Failure of Exchange Entitlements’ Theory of Famine: A Response”, Economic and Political Weekly, vol. XX, no. 41, October 12th and no. 42, October 19th pp 1747-51 &1797-1800 H8
  • Keen, David. ‘A disaster for whom? Local interests and international donors during famine among the Dinka of Sudan’. Disasters, vol. 15, no. 2, 1991, pp. 58–73.
  • De Waal, Alexander. 1989. Famine that Kills: Darfur, Sudan, 1984-85 (chapter 8, “Relief”), pp. 195-226. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Conley, Bridget, Alex de Waal, Catriona Murdoch and Wayne Jordash. 2021. “Introduction: Rendering Starvation Unthinkable – Preventing and Punishing Starvation Crimes”, in Bridget Conley

Assessment

Essay (80%, 3000 words) and presentation (15%) in the WT.
Presentation (5%) in the AT.

Key facts

Department: International Development

Total students 2023/24: Unavailable

Average class size 2023/24: Unavailable

Controlled access 2023/24: No

Value: Half Unit

Guidelines for interpreting course guide information

Course selection videos

Some departments have produced short videos to introduce their courses. Please refer to the course selection videos index page for further information.

Personal development skills

  • Team working
  • Application of information skills
  • Communication
  • Specialist skills