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Bio of SAJA speaker
Nov. 1994 and
Nov. 2000 in Manhattan
P.
Sainath
development writer & author
Mumbai-based
P. SAINATH is Asia's leading development journalist, writing frequently
about issues such as poverty and the effects of industralization on India.
Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen describes him as "one of the world's greatest
experts on famine and hunger". Through his work on the livelihoods
of India's rural poor, Sainath has changed the nature of the development
debate in his own country and across the world. His
landmark book, "Everybody Loves a Good Drought," is a devastating
portrait of Indian government economic policies gone awry. He received international
recognition after he spent two years in the poorest districts in India,
reporting about the daily struggles of the citizenry. He covered everything
from agriculture subsidies to starvation deaths. That work formed the
basis for his book. Sainath has
won numerous awards for his reportage, including the European Commission's
Natali Prize in 1994 for
articles related to development and poverty as well as working and living
conditions of vulnerable social groups. In November 2001, he won the Boerma
Journalism Prize from the United Nations Food and Agricutural Organization
-- the most important award in development journalism. Describing Sainath's
work, University of California journalism lecturer Conn Hallinan says,
"He does the kind of reporting American journalists only think about doing.
I don't know anybody who's better at it." You can read more
about Sainath at the following sites:

P. Sainath
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