Explain the causes of the global food crisis. Which do you think is the most significant contributor? How would you address these issues? What role can domestic governments play? What role can international agencies play? Examine how realists, liberals, and constructivists would solve this problem
What will be an ideal response?
There are concerns that food insecurity is growing, and these fears are leading to
political unrest. Globally, increased food prices have created civil unrest and a wave
of humanitarian crises in the developing world. Between 2007 and the start of 2009,
nearly forty countries had food riots—such as the "tortilla riots" in Mexico and the
"pasta riots" in Italy. In 2011, world food prices again escalated, surpassing the
peak that they had reached three years prior and causing hardship for many already
impoverished people across the world. Rising food prices were a major factor that
fed the unrest and anti-government protests that swept through many Arab countries.
As fears of food scarcity spread, panic buying ensued and governments responded
by enacting export bans and emergency price controls. Such dilemmas, particularly
for the poor, have led one observer to warn that food riots are likely to become
commonplace. Furthermore, not only do persistently high and volatile food prices
influence conditions of hunger and undernutrition, they also contribute to health
problems.
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Socialism is
a. a system in which the government does not engage in economic planning nor oversee an extensive welfare state, rather, it owns certain individual enterprises, which are typically in lucrative industries such as energy. b. a system in which the government intervenes in the economy to guide economic activities in an effort to foster economic growth. c. a set of government programs that provide significant welfare benefits and services. d. the economic approach that emphasizes government ownership of the means of production and government control of economic decisions such as the supply and prices of particular products. e. a system that allows significant government involvement in the economy in order to protect domestic economic interests.
Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
1. The list from which a sample is drawn is called a sampling frame. 2. Sampling error is the percentage by which survey results vary in 95 of 100 samples. 3. Larger samples have larger sampling errors than smaller ones. 4. Nonresponse bias is the extent to which views of nonrespondents differ from those of respondents.