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February 12, 2009
"PALAGUMMI SAINATH - THE AGE OF INEQUALITY"
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In February 2009, Deconstructing Dinner descended upon Edmonton for a week of local and
global food education. Every year, the University of
Alberta hosts
International Week, the
largest annual extracurricular educational event on campus.
International Week "fosters global citizenship through engagement with today's
most pressing issues". In its 24th year, the theme was Hungry for Change: Transcending Feast,
Famine and Frenzy.
As outlined by the event's organizers, "We live in an
unprecedented, contradictory era.
Hunger soars amid record harvests. At the same time,
community-based democratic movements on every
continent are showing the way toward a world without
hunger. They are proving that it is possible to reconnect
farming with ecological wisdom by enhancing soils
and yields while empowering citizens to meet universal
human needs for both food and dignity. In such a dark
and disorienting time, solutions are still evident. The
only real problem we have to worry about is despair
arising from feelings of powerlessness. As we dig
to the roots of the global crisis, we protect against
despair and find our own power. Only then can we
perceive how our individual and group actions can
dissolve the forces that brought us here and plant the
seeds of lasting solutions."
Deconstructing Dinner recorded one of the event's featured speakers, Palagummi Sainath.
Voices
Palagummi Sainath, Rural Affairs Editor, The Hindu (Mumbai, India) -
Once described by Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen as “one of the world’s foremost experts
on poverty and hunger”, Palagummi Sainath is a dedicated development reporter and
photojournalist. He spends the majority of his year with the village people of India’s rural
interior on which he reports. As the current rural affairs editor of
The Hindu and author of the highly acclaimed
Everybody Loves a Good Drought:
Stories from India’s Poorest Districts, his writing on the impacts of globalization
on India’s rural poor, and particularly farmer suicides, has raised public awareness and
influenced both policy in India and the development debate in general. His unflinching
coverage of the negative impacts of neoliberal policy on India’s poorest populations has
earned him over 30 awards including Amnesty International’s Global Human Rights Journalism
Prize and the Raymond Magsaysay Award for Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication.
Musical Selection (name/title/album/label)
Theme/Soundclip - Adham Shaikh, Infusion, Fusion, Sonic Turtle (CDN)
Alternate Audio Instructions...
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Transcript
Additional Audio
- Unheard segment from P.Sainath's talk 02.03.09. Sainath speaks to the question of "How did we get here?" (The Age of Inequality).
LISTEN
- Response to audience question re: violence, the collective voice of Indian farmers, and the 2004 election in Andhra Pradesh.
LISTEN
Articles
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