Abstract
THE United Nations Conference on Food and Agriculture which has just ended at Hot Springs, Virginia, brought together representatives of forty-four nations to consider the world problem of food distribution after the War. It has been described, not inaccurately, by the editors of Fortune as the first of the peace conferences to end the War, and for the first time in history we are witnessing the planning of the strategy of peace while the objectives of war are still far from their fulfilment. The Conference has yet to be followed by action, it is true, but on its face value its declarations and decisions give reasonable ground for the belief that an important blow has been struck for sanity in world economics.
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FOOD AND THE STRATEGY OF PEACE. Nature 152, 1–4 (1943). https://doi.org/10.1038/152001a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/152001a0