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BlomCast
Philipp Blom
67 episodes
1 day ago
The current regime of agriculture leads to a paradoxical situation: not only does this system destroy more in terms of natural resources than it creates in terms of food, it also leads to hundreds of millions of people being overfed while simultaneously being undernourished. There are now more obese children in the world than undernourished ones, and the effects on their physical and mental health are severe. But how did we get here? Stuart’s changing point lies at the end of the Second World...
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Society & Culture
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The current regime of agriculture leads to a paradoxical situation: not only does this system destroy more in terms of natural resources than it creates in terms of food, it also leads to hundreds of millions of people being overfed while simultaneously being undernourished. There are now more obese children in the world than undernourished ones, and the effects on their physical and mental health are severe. But how did we get here? Stuart’s changing point lies at the end of the Second World...
Show more...
Society & Culture
History,
Science,
Social Sciences
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/fb/cf/a7/fbcfa784-3e4c-8289-194b-5540bc6b60df/mza_1153468483172877489.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
[37] Padraic Scanian — What the Irish Potato Famine Tells us About Markets and Merit
BlomCast
1 hour 3 minutes
5 months ago
[37] Padraic Scanian — What the Irish Potato Famine Tells us About Markets and Merit
Send us a text The so-called Irish Potato Famine between 1845 and 1852 killed up to one million people and led to the emigration of hundreds of thousands of others. It left a deep imprint on Irish, European and American history and memory. But this was not a natural catastrophe, argues economic historian Padraic Scanian. He sees the famine as a result of globalisation, and of a very Victorian determination to let the market do its work and discipline the undeserving poor. The stereotype of th...
BlomCast
The current regime of agriculture leads to a paradoxical situation: not only does this system destroy more in terms of natural resources than it creates in terms of food, it also leads to hundreds of millions of people being overfed while simultaneously being undernourished. There are now more obese children in the world than undernourished ones, and the effects on their physical and mental health are severe. But how did we get here? Stuart’s changing point lies at the end of the Second World...