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Auteur principal: Findley, Paul
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 1991
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED343596
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author Findley, Paul
author_facet Findley, Paul
Findley, Paul
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Libraries and Development. Findley, Paul Access to Information Developing Nations Federal Legislation Foreign Countries Hunger Information Dissemination Information Retrieval Information Storage Information Transfer International Programs Land Grant Universities Library Role Nutrition Rural Development Rural Extension World Problems These keynote remarks review some of the origins of Title XII of the Foreign Assistance Act. This legislation, whose goal is to conquer famine and malnutrition worldwide, was signed into law by President Ford in 1975. Senator Hubert Humphrey's address at the 1977 Famine Prevention Symposium in Washington, DC, is recounted with emphasis on his challenge to the participating diplomats, university leaders, and AID officials to banish the age-old problem of famine and malnutrition worldwide through farmer and land-grant education programs in developing countries. Two books which inspired the legislative process that culminated in Title XII are also reviewed. The first, "We Don't Know How" (William Paddock), exposes the failures of AID projects in Mexico and Central America and argues that two major factors in these failures were a breakdown in communications among the project sponsors and the lack of institutional memory. The second, "Partners with India" (Hadley Read), suggests that U.S. land-grant models should be applied in countries that need to improve agricultural production. Attention is also drawn in these remarks to the preliminary results of a survey of the policies of 40 Title XII institutions for the storage and retrieval of development assistance information. It is noted that some U.S. institutions that have had long experience with development contracts have done little to retain and catalog the information resulting from these contracts, or to promote information retrieval by students, teachers, scientists, and other institutions. Librarians are urged to provide leadership in the storage and dissemination of research information on famine and malnutrition to support efforts to overcome these problems in needy countries. (MAB)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED343596
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1991
record_format eric
spellingShingle Libraries and Development.
Findley, Paul
Access to Information
Developing Nations
Federal Legislation
Foreign Countries
Hunger
Information Dissemination
Information Retrieval
Information Storage
Information Transfer
International Programs
Land Grant Universities
Library Role
Nutrition
Rural Development
Rural Extension
World Problems
Libraries and Development. Findley, Paul Access to Information Developing Nations Federal Legislation Foreign Countries Hunger Information Dissemination Information Retrieval Information Storage Information Transfer International Programs Land Grant Universities Library Role Nutrition Rural Development Rural Extension World Problems These keynote remarks review some of the origins of Title XII of the Foreign Assistance Act. This legislation, whose goal is to conquer famine and malnutrition worldwide, was signed into law by President Ford in 1975. Senator Hubert Humphrey's address at the 1977 Famine Prevention Symposium in Washington, DC, is recounted with emphasis on his challenge to the participating diplomats, university leaders, and AID officials to banish the age-old problem of famine and malnutrition worldwide through farmer and land-grant education programs in developing countries. Two books which inspired the legislative process that culminated in Title XII are also reviewed. The first, "We Don't Know How" (William Paddock), exposes the failures of AID projects in Mexico and Central America and argues that two major factors in these failures were a breakdown in communications among the project sponsors and the lack of institutional memory. The second, "Partners with India" (Hadley Read), suggests that U.S. land-grant models should be applied in countries that need to improve agricultural production. Attention is also drawn in these remarks to the preliminary results of a survey of the policies of 40 Title XII institutions for the storage and retrieval of development assistance information. It is noted that some U.S. institutions that have had long experience with development contracts have done little to retain and catalog the information resulting from these contracts, or to promote information retrieval by students, teachers, scientists, and other institutions. Librarians are urged to provide leadership in the storage and dissemination of research information on famine and malnutrition to support efforts to overcome these problems in needy countries. (MAB)
title Libraries and Development.
topic Access to Information
Developing Nations
Federal Legislation
Foreign Countries
Hunger
Information Dissemination
Information Retrieval
Information Storage
Information Transfer
International Programs
Land Grant Universities
Library Role
Nutrition
Rural Development
Rural Extension
World Problems
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED343596