Some really impressive work by the Fault Lines team at Al Jazeera English on the political and historical roots of the crisis in the Horn of Africa. See this 24-minute program about the origins of the famine in Somalia and this one about drought, food prices and climate change in Kenya. Each links the current problems to political decisions in the US and other countries.

Al Jazeera has a useful page full of information and reports from the Horn.

Take a look at Sandy Tolan and Charlotte Buchen’s report from Egypt for PBS NewsHour. It’s part of the “Food for 9 Billion” project, a collaboration between Homelands Productions, the Center for Investigative Reporting, PBS NewsHour and Marketplace.

Our partners at Marketplace will air a piece by reporter Scott Tong on today’s show about the crucial difference between famine and drought. The story compares the situation in Somalia, where tens of thousands have died of starvation, with Ethiopia, which is enduring the same drought without major loss of life.

Scott reported the piece from Ethiopia and the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya. It’s part of the “Food for 9 Billion” project, a collaboration between Homelands Productions, the Center for Investigative Reporting, American Public Media’s Marketplace and PBS NewsHour.

A few comments on Marketplace’s story page for the first piece in the Food for 9 Billion series talk about the need to control population. It’s an important point, and one of our upcoming pieces, reported in the Philippines, will address it directly. Homelands colleague Alan Weisman (author of the bestselling The World Without Us) is also working on a book about population and the world’s carrying capacity. We’re all curious to find out what he thinks can be done to slow growth.

Yesterday’s story was about the role of science in the effort to produce more food. I realize that’s not as innocuous a topic as it may seem. One of the current debates in the food world has to do with what some people consider to be an obsession with increasing the yields of major cereals. This raises fears of the spread of industrial agriculture controlled by big companies pushing genetically modified seeds. Even without this worry, a single-minded focus on yield seems to ignore the fundamental truth about why most people are hungry: not because there’s not enough food, but because they can’t afford to buy it. In the story, I try to paint a slightly more nuanced picture, highlighting the search for local solutions that take farmers’ welfare and interests into account.

That said, I do find myself believing that boosting production matters, especially for smallholders. Farms in sub-Saharan Africa are woefully unproductive, and malnutrition rates are staggeringly high. In many places, “the hunger season” lasts two or three months every year. Those tend to be the same places where the human population is growing the fastest. More food would help.

Boosting production doesn’t necessarily involve re-engineering plants to yield more. The piece takes a quick look at one attempt to do that (not using GM technology, as it happens, although the parallel effort to rejigger the rice plant does) and features the participatory breeding work of geneticist Fernando Castillo (who is wary of hybrids and anti-GMO). It also notes that scientists are trying to breed plants that resist pests and diseases (which can cut harvests in half in some countries) and that tolerate flooding and drought. But productivity is not all about breeding and seeds.

In fact one point I wish I had had time to make in the piece is that agroecological methods, which use combinations of crops and trees and animals, can actually produce more food per unit of land than monocultures. When managed right, these systems create synergies that reduce or eliminate the need for both fertilizers and pesticides. They can also lead to better diets, and provide important services that field crops alone can’t (like shelter, firewood, animal feed, fiber, and so on).

And, importantly, they help spread risk, not only of bad harvests but also of price drops that come with bumper crops. Producing oodles of corn or tomatoes or whatever tends to drive prices down, especially if everybody else is doing it at the same time. But agroecology is trickier than it sounds, and techniques and components vary from place to place. Millions of farmers in poor countries are using polycultures now (it’s the traditional way to farm in most places), but many of those systems are performing pretty poorly.

Anyway, complicated stuff, and I don’t pretend to understand all of it. That’s one of the great benefits of being a journalist—you get to learn along the way!

Jon

We at Homelands Productions have been talking about doing a series on hunger and food security since before the “WORKING” series was finished in 2009. We’re finally there, with the first two pieces scheduled to air today on Marketplace. First will be a little intro piece, mixed by our friend Chris Brookes and narrated by show host Kai Ryssdal, launching the series. Then comes a story I reported from Mexico, about the role of agricultural R&D in meeting the world’s food needs. (A ridiculously broad topic for a seven-minute piece, I found!)

This is a soft launch. Our partners at the Center for Investigative Reporting are beavering away on TV segments for PBS NewsHour. Plus we’ve got big plans for a website with maps, timelines, animations, infographics, blog, etc. We’ll make a splashy announcement when there’s something to look at.

In the meantime, I hope you get to listen tonight. Feedback always welcome!

Jon

This is a busy month on the feeding-the-world front. October 16 is World Food Day, which means that food and anti-hunger organizations are holding meetings, making statements, handing out prizes, launching campaigns and publishing reports. Then, on October 31, the human population is expected to pass the 7 billion mark. And so media outlets from The Nation to the Financial Times are turning their attention, at least briefly, to the question of how (or whether) everyone on the planet may be adequately fed, not just this year, but into the increasingly hot, stormy, crowded future.

We at Homelands have been poking around these issues for some time now. Our next project, “Food for 9 Billion” (sorry, no website yet!), is scheduled to launch in November and continue for a year. We’re teaming up with the Center for Investigative ReportingMarketplace and PBS NewsHour to produce a radio series, TV series, web features and (if funding permits) hour-long TV and radio documentaries. The hope is to make some sense of the economic, environmental, technical, social and political dimensions of one of humanity’s most fundamental challenges. We go in with few preconceptions—we’re as curious as we hope you are about what works and what doesn’t.

If you’d like to get an email when the project goes public, please join our mailing list on the lower left-hand corner of our website.

Just a quick heads up about the (In)Visible Project led by photographer and multimedia artist Bear Guerra. The project creates mobile physical exhibits featuring photos and audio of San Diego’s homeless population. It got great reviews when it debuted at the ART SAN DIEGO Contemporary Art Fair at the beginning of September. There’s a short video of the installation here.

Bear and his wife Ruxandra Guidi formed the Fonografia Collective, for which Homelands serves as a fiscal sponsor.

This is from Sandy Tolan, Homelands co-founder and author of The Lemon Tree, about his new book project and blog.

I’ll be spending the summer in the West Bank working on a new book about a group of musical visionaries from around the world, the amazing Palestinian children who are their students, and the story of the music schools they share, founded by a former child of the first Palestinian intifada.

I’ve started blogging about it, about what it feels like on the ground in the region now, and about ordinary life in Ramallah, the West Bank, and the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon. It’s mostly off-the-map material, personal impressions, moments in time, and bright, sharp shards of insight ordinary people are sharing with me. This is combined with a collection of my recent pieces and commentaries from Al Jazeera English, NPR, Salon, and the Christian Science Monitor.

The latest post is called “Beethoven in Shatila.” There’s also a link to an NPR piece that traces the roots of the story in my new book. Would love to hear your comments – there’s a place for that on the blog.  And if you’re so inclined, please spread the word.