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Josué de Castro

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Name
  
Josue Castro


Role
  
Writer


Born
  
5 September 1908 (
1908-09-05
)

Occupation
  
Writer, physician, geographer, public administrator, diplomat, activist

Died
  
September 24, 1973, Paris, France

Books
  
The geography of hunger, The geopolitics of hunger, Of Men and Crabs

Josu de castro cidad o do mundo 1994


Josué de Castro, born Josué Apolônio de Castro (5 September 1908 in Recife – 24 September 1973 in Paris), was a Brazilian physician, expert on nutrition, geographer, writer, public administrator, and activist against world hunger.

Contents

Josué de Castro wwwjosuedecastroorgbrjcfotos20jc04jpg

His book Geopolitics of Hunger was granted with The Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation Award, in 1952. Two years later, he received the International Peace Prize.

Josué de Castro Josue De Castro Vivemos hoje uma hora de luta decisiva entre o po

He taught at the University of Brazil (today's UFRJ) and was chairman of the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). He was also a member of the Brazilian parliament and a diplomat. His political rights came to an end with the military coup of 1964, when he moved to France. For many years he was president of the Association Médicale Internationale pour l’Etude des Conditions de Vie et de Santé and member of other international organizations. He taught at Paris 8 University until his death.

Josué de Castro Josu de Castro e a geografia da fome Templo Cultural Delfos

Josu de castro cidad o do mundo


The Geography of Hunger

Ground-breaking ecological work about the political issue of hunger in Brazil. Published in 1946, the book emphasizes the socio-economic backgrounds of the biological manifestation of hunger and condemns the physical determinism.

The Geopolitics of Hunger

Originally published in the U.S. with the title "The Geography of Hunger" in 1952, translated into 26 languages, is one of the classic works on food and population. His themes are very much the opposite of those sounded by the neo-Malthusians. He does not believe that hunger is the "natural result of overpopulation," but is rather a man-made phenomenon. Even more, he undertakes to demonstrate that hunger, rather than being the result of overpopulation, is the cause of it. The work presented new formulations for underdevelopment, and was granted with The Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation Award.

Death in the Northeast

A book that aims to strike the interest for the Northeast Brazilian people’s situation. Written before military coup of 1964, and published during the military dictatorship, it clarifies the political turmoil and explosive tensions around the Brazilian agrarian system, established by feudalist Portuguese colonizers.

Of Men and Crabs

Exiled at Paris, he wrote about the scene of his childhood.

Josué de Castro O indigente mental que atacou Josu de Castro TIJOLAO A

References

Josué de Castro Wikipedia


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