Food Bank Nations Poverty Corporate Charity and the Right to Food 1st edition by Graham Riches – Ebook PDF Instand Download/DeliveryISBN: 1351729861 9781351729864
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ISBN-10 : 1351729861
ISBN-13 : 9781351729864
Author: Graham Riches
In the world’s most affluent and food secure societies, why is it now publicly acceptable to feed donated surplus food, dependent on corporate food waste, to millions of hungry people? While recognizing the moral imperative to feed hungry people, this book challenges the effectiveness, sustainability and moral legitimacy of globally entrenched corporate food banking as the primary response to rich world food poverty. It investigates the prevalence and causes of domestic hunger and food waste in OECD member states, the origins and thirty-year rise of US style charitable food banking, and its institutionalization and corporatization.
Food Bank Nations Poverty Corporate Charity and the Right to Food 1st Table of contents:
PART I: Domestic hunger to charitable food banking
2. Food poverty and rich world hunger
Thinking about food poverty and access to food
Prevalence of food insecurity
Persistence of domestic hunger
Who is hungry and why
Reflections
3. Rise of food bank nations
The legacy of charity and food safety nets
US food bank origins and institutionalization
Crossing OECD national borders
Entrenching food charity safety net
Public Food Aid – MDP and FEAD
Reflections
PART II: Corporate capture
4. Corporate capture to rich world consolidation
Big Food and corporate partners
Bread and circuses
Mixed media messages
Corporate capture: hunger as a charitable business
Reflections
5. Corporate food waste: manufacturing surplus food
Food waste: the imperative to act
Thinking about food waste food and surplus food
Prevalence of rich world food waste
Waste along the food value chain
Food waste manufacturing the surplus food agenda
Corporate food waste, symptom not a cure
Reflections
6. Corporate food banking: solution or problem
Thinking about food charity as the primary response to hunger
Big philanthropy
An effective solution?
A continuing problem?
Reflections
7. Corporate food charity: false promises of solidarity
Solidarity: the moral imperative
‘Uncritical’ solidarity: hidden functions, false promises
Shaming the hungry, regulating the poor
Taking the politics out of hunger: who benefits and why
Reflections
PART III: Rights talk and public policy
8. Collective solidarity and the right to food: moral, legal and political obligations
World Food Summits and Right to Food Guidelines
Thinking about solidarity and food banking
Critical and collective solidarity: we are all rights holders
Why the right to food in international law matters
State accountability: resetting the moral compass
Reflections
9. Public accountability and the right to food: international monitoring to the rescue
Food, as a matter of human rights
The state as ‘primary duty bearer’
Mainstreaming the right to food: international mechanisms
Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food: in the rich world
Monitoring the right to food: Periodic Reviews
Reflections
10. Civil society with a right to food bite: reclaiming public policy
‘Rights’ talk
Rich world compliance with the right to food, or not
The non-compliant indifferent State
Civil society advocacy: holding the State to account
Reflections
PART IV: Gathering political will
11. Changing the conversation: challenging propositions
Foodbanks Inc and the indifferent State
A necessary conversation
Persistence of domestic hunger: the problem remains
Policy choices: divergent paths
Right to food: in principle and practice
Challenging propositions for public debate
We are doing our bit. Where is the State?
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