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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This book is about the famines and food shortages that struck India and Britain at the close of the eighteenth century, and it explores how these crises and episodes of scarcity gave rise to scientific efforts to explain and quantify ‘famine’. Focusing on the time period between the Bengal famine of 1770 and the food shortages in Britain in 1800, it explores the development of the concepts of ‘artificial scarcity’ (and ‘artificial famine’), and how statistical science and philosophy played a role in the naturalization of famine. During this time, Britain’s first ‘Board of Agriculture’ was established, creating political opportunities for a rising class of agriculturalists interested in the promotion of their science as a means of confronting and solving the empire’s food insecurity during a time of war and upheaval. Following the networks and collaboration between this Board of Agriculture and the East India Company, the book explores the careers and correspondence of agriculturalists, economists, Company officials, scientists, hack writers, and politicians. In conclusion, Explaining Famine shows how these debates over the anthropogenic and natural causes of scarcity and famine shaped the subsequent development of the field of food security and modern concerns over carrying capacity, environment, and population.</jats:p>

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famine food explores scarcity time

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