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Who discussed the famine in China in detail and considered it an ideological crime?

Paper 1 · Comprehension UGC NET June 2024 Re-Exam (30.08.2024) Shift-I
Passage
Anthropologists have questioned universal explanations of war. Some hold out the hope that war, like slavery, can be erased by wise collective decision-making. But warfare is too diverse and historically widespread to be cured by simple remedies. Economic motives have always existed. A fight for salt or metals, gold and treasure, enslaved labour or access to trade routes, or oil and other resources has marked many of the world's violent conflicts. But ideological and religious confrontations have also driven war. Hubristic warfare, from Alexander to Napoleon to Hitler, was meant to establish dominion. The rise of Chinese power has provoked questions on whether potential conflict with the US will descend into war. The search for security can be found in every warlike episode, as frontiers feel fragile. Is war on the decline? New forms of settling conflict, cyber-attacks, stresses and clashes of beliefs are only too visible in the emerging international order. And so, the future of war might not look very different from its past.
Who discussed the famine in China in detail and considered it an ideological crime?
AKarl Marx
BAmartya Sen ✓ Correct
CNoam Chomsky
DT. S. Eliot
Correct answer: (B) Amartya Sen — Amartya Sen discussed it in detail, so that is the answer.
Explanation
Amartya Sen discussed it in detail, so that is the answer.
The passage attributes the analysis to him.
It notes this work earned him the Nobel Prize.
He called the famine an ideological crime.
The other names are not credited here.
Hence Amartya Sen is correct.

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