The Forum > Article Comments > The global hunger challenge: an opportunity for Australian leadership > Comments
The global hunger challenge: an opportunity for Australian leadership : Comments
By James Ingram, published 11/11/2008Failure to significantly reduce poverty could eventually destabilise world peace and security; dealing with it successfully is in our national interest.
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He is probably aware of the ecological restraints within which the human mammal resides, and of statements regarding it by people of eminence within that field. People such as:
Charles Fenner at the BAAS 1937 meeting in Nottingham – “If lands are productive, population increases, and the pressure becomes as great as ever.”
David Davis, employed during the 1940s to do the science for the USA’s attempts at uban rat minimisation . He noted that poisoning and trapping will not achieve the aims; only deprivation of food will do that. He noted the similarities of behavior between human and rodent populations.
Ecologist Alan Newsome in a personal comment in the 1990s regarding the fundamentals driving mammalian populations – “food and sex”.
If James Ingram is aware of the above, as might be expected, then why does he not incorporate it into his work? His field would have at least some prospect of eventual success if he were to call publicly and loudly for more, and successful, effort towards population minimization in the less-developed world? The appropriate direction was agreed upon at the UN conference on population and development at Cairo in 1994. If Ingram agrees with that (as he should), why not give it a plug at every opportunity