World Hunger

By Frances Moore Lappé, Joseph Collins

World Hunger
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Abstract: The concepts of why hunger exists and how the causes are being attacked are presented in the light of a new attitude toward old ideas. The world is capable of producing enough food for every human being. Overpopulation is not the cause; underutilization of land is a far worse problem. Hunger is not caused by food scarcity but by unequal distribution and ownership. These inequalities can be overcome without jeopardizing freedom, justice or the quality of the environment, not through increased foreign aid or limiting agricultural exports, but by attacking the roots of the problems: social attitudes which view the world's hungry not as potential producers but as burdens; control of basic resources by a small minority; concepts which stereotype the poor as incapable; and ineffectual foreign aid.

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