Viewpoint: Determining famine: Multi-dimensional analysis for the twenty-first century |
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Affiliation: | 1. Spatial Health Metrics Group, INFORM Project, Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi P.O. Box 43640-00100, Kenya;2. Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Centre for Geographic Medicine Research (coast), Kilifi, Kenya;3. Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford, CCVTM, Oxford OX3 7LJ, UK;4. Nutrition Section, United Nations Children''s Fund (UNICEF), Kenya Country Office, UN Complex Gigiri, Nairobi, Kenya;5. Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit (FSNAU) – Somalia, United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization, Ngecha Road Campus, Nairobi, Kenyan;6. Warwick Medical School, Health Sciences Research Institute, University of Warwick, Warwick Evidence, Gibbet Hill, CV4 7AL Coventry, UK;7. Department of Mathematics and Information sciences Faculty of Engineering and Environment, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 8ST, UK;8. Health Economics and Evidence Synthesis Research Unit, Department of Population Health, Luxembourg Institute of Health L-1445 Strassen, Luxembourg |
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Abstract: | Famine was, until recently, largely a matter of historical or theoretical interest, but the “four famines” threat of 2017 demonstrated that Somalia in 2011 was not an aberration or outlier: famine is a contemporary reality and threat. Current methods of famine analysis however tend to emphasize the severity of current-status indicators as the sole dimension of analysis. This article argues that a more multi-dimensional view is required for a full understanding of famine, including not only severity but also the magnitude of the crisis, the temporal dimension or duration, and the spatial dimension or geographic specificity of the crisis. The article draws on recent experience of famine analysis in Nigeria, South Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen to demonstrate the way in which our current analytical perspective misses critical dimensions of famine, and the consequences of this for analysis, prevention, and response. A more multi-dimensional perspective sheds new light on famine dynamics, but also highlights the importance of causal analysis in addition to classification or determination. |
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Keywords: | Famine analysis Integrated Phase Classification Severity Magnitude Duration Geographic specificity |
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