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Book

Confronting Hunger in the USA

Book

Confronting Hunger in the USA

DOI link for Confronting Hunger in the USA

Confronting Hunger in the USA book

Searching for Community Empowerment and Food Security in Food Access Programs

Confronting Hunger in the USA

DOI link for Confronting Hunger in the USA

Confronting Hunger in the USA book

Searching for Community Empowerment and Food Security in Food Access Programs
ByAdam M. Pine
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 19 July 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315573427
Pages 178
eBook ISBN 9781315573427
Subjects Built Environment, Environment and Sustainability, Geography, Health and Social Care, Social Sciences
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Pine, A.M. (2016). Confronting Hunger in the USA: Searching for Community Empowerment and Food Security in Food Access Programs (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315573427

ABSTRACT

Food insecurity in the US is a critical issue that is experienced by approximately 15% of the population each year. Hunger is not caused by an inability to produce enough food for the population, but is instead a manifestation of federal agricultural policies that support the overproduction of commodity crops and neoliberal social policies that seek to lower the amount of benefits dispersed to those in need. This book focuses on how four different food-based community programs address both the physical sensation of hunger as well as the political and economic disempowerment that work against the ability of people experiencing food insecurity to mobilize as a political force. Confronting Hunger in the USA argues that most food programs do more to create community among their volunteers than among program participants and tend to reinforce neoliberal understandings of citizenship. Community food programs reach out to the most vulnerable members of society in caring and gentle ways and often use the language of alternative economies to articulate a different relationship between the individual and the state. However, the projects in this study act as individual pieces of the state's insufficient social safety net and are only beginning to articulate a new relationship between food and society.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|27 pages

The Struggle to Build Community and Feed Society

chapter 2|20 pages

Food Security, the Industrial Food System, and Community in the US

chapter 3|32 pages

Creating Community and Empowerment in Community-based Food Programs

chapter 4|31 pages

The Emerging Alternative Economies in Community-based Food Programs

chapter 5|24 pages

Neoliberalism and the Porous Continuum of Care for the Food Insecure

chapter 6|19 pages

Looking for Paths to Food Access and Solidarity

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