A look at the growing population and what this means for world food supply.
2,010 words (approx. 8 pages) |
3 sources |
2002
Paper Summary:
This paper analyzes the food supply available in the world and compares it to the rapidly growing world population. The author examines world food distribution and how it effects world hunger arguing that distribution is unequal. Includes arguments by various critics.
From the Paper:
"The increase in food production over the past 200 years has been greater than the increase in population. So we ask, Why do nearly twelve million children per year die of hunger? That number is more than the number of people who died each year in World War II, and these are children, not soldiers, we are talking about. (Lappe 2). It has been proven that there is enough food in the world for everybody to be sufficiently healthy. The problem is that this food has not been distributed equally among countries. With the world's population expected to grow fifty percent by the year 2050 to 9.37 billion, What are the odds we can feed everybody then when we can't even do it now? This is a question that has been studied, pondered, and written about extensively for years. Many people have different thoughts and opinions about it. Something definitely will have to be done in the future. The question is what."
More papers on World Food Supply Verses World Population:
World Food Supply Verses World Population (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Comparison-Essay-World-Food-Supply-Verses-World-Population/3326
"World Food Supply Verses World Population" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Comparison-Essay-World-Food-Supply-Verses-World-Population/3326>
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Published by:
Robert Hill
Publisher Since:
Feb 28, 2002
I graduated from the University of Arizona with a major in marketing but I have taken classes in many different subjects from International relations to ethics in health care, etc.