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Achieving Food Security in China

The Challenges Ahead

Zhang-Yue Zhou (James Cook University, Australia)

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Paperback

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English
Routledge
05 June 2019
China’s food security has never failed to attract the public’s attention. Feeding China’s large population has always been a huge challenge. The latest large-scale famine took place in 1958–62 during which approximately 37 million people died of starvation. However, since the early 1980s, China’s food availability has improved drastically. The important question is then: has China achieved its food security? Although China’s food availability has significantly improved, it has not achieved a high level of food security due to the lack of progress in several other important dimensions of food security.

The book examines China’s food security practices in the past six decades, explores the root causes that led to food shortages or abundances, and elaborates on the challenges that China has to deal with in order to improve its future food security. China’s quest for food security serves as a valuable lesson for many other countries to learn through China’s experiences and to better manage their food security in the future. The book also draws attention to the fact that China’s food security status has a huge impact on the global community and hence global collaboration is a mutually beneficial approach.

By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   453g
ISBN:   9780367350628
ISBN 10:   0367350629
Series:   Routledge Studies in the Modern World Economy
Pages:   156
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary ,  A / AS level
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Zhang-Yue Zhou is Professor at the College of Business, Law and Governance, James Cook University.

Reviews for Achieving Food Security in China: The Challenges Ahead

'A valuable study of the Chinese experience of food security and insecurity in its recent past and exploration of some of the implications for global food security issues.' - Kenneth E Jackson, Research Professor, Auckland Institute of Studies, Former Director of the Centre for Development Studies, University of Auckland 'Wisdom is not a trait that is easily or quickly gained. It's a process that takes time and living. But we can acquire wisdom and become wiser if we open our eyes, ears and minds to the insights of others. It is via knowledge passed through generations and from one human being to others that we truly understand the world around us. It is in this light that I regard Zhang-Yue Zhou's latest effort. Zhou's Achieving Food Security in China: The Challenges Ahead is ostensibly about China's efforts to achieve food security. However, it is also about sharing a lifetime of hard knocks, acquired experience, knowledge, analysis, and wisdom as to the circumstances, policies, processes, institutions and incentive systems which either contributed to or undermined the achievement of that goal. To some extent, this book also serves as a warning of the never again variety in the sense that the stories, analysis and insights are shared to avoid similar follies in other countries and in the future.' - Brad Gilmour, Chief of Trade, Policy and Market Analysis, Mouralea Trade, Agriculture and Resource Consulting 'This book is not just an intellectual exercise or research topic to inform China's food policies. It is apparent how deeply personal the subject is to Zhou as he relates his own experiences and those of his family, growing up in rural China during these famine periods. [...] Zhou presents the historical context in Achieving Food Security in China with passion from his own experiences. [...] Zhou's personal experience combined with his research provides a valuable perspective into not only where China is now with its food security, but also how it got there.' - The Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Volume 62, Issue 3 'This book is an excellent read for people who keep an interest on China's food security issue. Finally, this book may also be helpful for students, academicians and policy makers from other food insecure countries to take home some of the experiences of China's food security journey.' - Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics, Volume 72, Issue 4 The provision of food represents a fundamental obligation of the state to its people. In the opening pages of Zhang-Yue Zhou's Achieving Food Security in China, the horrifying consequences of failed agricultural policy are laid out in deeply personal terms...In a graphic account of the famine, Zhou highlights the extreme misery of rural dwellers: families resorted to cannibalism; individuals were tortured when found to be concealing food; people ate the excrement of better-fed rural cadres for nutrients. For Zhou, China's food security failures were a consequence of irrational government policy, and this book seeks to ensure that China enacts the right policies that will ensure its citizens will never go hungry again. - John K. Yasuda, for China Quarterly, 2020


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