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2012 Menu
- Hunger 2012
- Issues
- Full Report
- Executive Summary
- Foreword
- Chapters
- Introduction
- Chapter 1
- Farm Policies for Today and Tomorrow
- Revisiting Rural Priorities
- Production Agriculture -- Taking the Farm to Scale
- Against the Grain -- The Value-Added of Small and Medium-Size Farmers
- Program Crops Versus Rural America
- Farm Policies and Poverty
- An Appetite for sustainably Produced Foods Creates New Opportunities for Farmers
- Reconnecting Farm Policy with Nutrition
- A Farm Policy that Creates Jobs and Helps Rebuild Struggling Economies
- Chapter 2
- Fortifying the U.S. Nutrition Safety Net
- Philadelphia's Witnesses: Listen to the Voice of Hunger
- Shopping for Healthy Foods - Access Barriers in Low-Income Neighborhoods
- One in Four
- Nutrition Programs Struggle to Stave Off Cuts
- Closing the Healthy Food Gap in Rural Oregon
- Getting Serious About Obesity
- Incentives to Help SNAP Households Purchase Healthy Foods
- The School Cafeteria: Where the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act and the Farm Bill Meet
- Farm-to-School Programs Help Kids Eat Better and Benefit Local Farmers and Communities
- Charity Can't Do It Alone`
- Chapter 3
- Farm Workers and Immigration Policy
- Maria's Story
- Regularize and Rationalize Farm Labor
- The Agricultural Workforce
- Importing Farm Workers: From Bracero to H-2A
- The Most Economically Disadvantaged Working Group in the United States
- The Elusive Citizen Field Laborer
- Farmers and Farm Workers
- E-Verify
- A Specialty Crop Sector on Edge
- AgJBOS: The Grand Compromise
- Farm Work is a Skilled Profession
- Migration and Development
- Chapter 4
- 1,000 Days
- Understanding Malnutrition and Responding Effectively
- Rural Mozambique: Constantia, Gustavo, and Their Neighbors
- Quantity versus Quality: How Does Food Aid Do the Most Good
- Developments in Food and Nutrition Science Focus Attention on Improving the Quality of Food Aid
- Food aid is Vital for People with HIV/AIDS
- Going the Distance: The Food aid Supply Chain
- Cost-Effective Improvements in the Quality of U.S. Food Aid
- Phasing Out Monetization
- A Moment of Uncertainty on Food Aid
- Aligning Food aid and Feed the Future
- Feed the Future in Mozambique
- Protecting Today's Investments, Looking Toward Tomorrow
- A U.S. - Ugandan Research Partnership
- Safe-Farming: Crop Insurance for Smallholders
- Conclusion
- Guest Contributors
- The Good Food Movement
- Charity Can't Do It Alone`
- Safe-Farming: Crop Insurance for Smallholders
- A U.S. - Ugandan Research Partnership
- Starvation in the Horn of Africa
- A Moment of Uncertainty on Food Aid
- A Case for Environmental Justice
- Farm Work is a Skilled Profession
- Understanding Malnutrition and Responding Effectively
- Regularize and Rationalize Farm Labor
- Reference
- Sponsors
- Acknowledgements
- Download the Report
- Multimedia
- Interactive Data
- Study Guide
- Leader's Resource
- Session 1: Our Broken Food System can be Transformed
- Session 2: Nutrition is Critical to Fighting Hunger
- Session 3: Farm Policies Should Not Show Favoritism
- Session 4: Poor and Vulnerable People Should Be Protected
- Session 5: Farmers, Farm Workers, and Just Livelihoods
- Session 6: Community Efforts Can Transform Food Systems
- Press
- Blog
2011 Menu
- Hunger 2011
- Issues
- Full Report
- Executive Summary
- Foreword
- Chapters
- Introduction
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- "Whose Aid Is It?"
- A New Way of Doing Business
- Feed the Future and Country-led Development
- Two Approaches to Country-led Development
- Capacity-building to Sustain Reductions in Hunger and Poverty
- Capacity-building and the Civil Society Sector in Developing Countries
- Donor Coordination to Support Country-led Development
- Building Momentum for Reform
- The Cost of Donor Demands
- African-led and African-owned
- Haiti: Meeting Reality Head-on
- Chapter 3
- Good Intentions are Not Enough
- Room for Improvement
- Untie Aid: Tied Aid is Not Cost-effective and Undermines Capacity-building
- Curtail Earmarks: Excessive Earmarking Undermines Country-led Development
- Be a Reliable Partner: Development Takes Time
- Coordinate Trade Policy with Development Assistance: When Aligned, They Increase the Benefits of Both
- Strengthen USAID: The United States Needs a Revitalized Development Agency
- Reform Foreign Assistance
- The Roadmap to End Hunger
- Chapter 4
- Conclusion
- Guest Contributors
- Time to Trade: For Africa, Food Security Means Markets and Growth
- A Message from the Honorable Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
- The Future is Getting Brighter
- Window of Opportunity
- Sustainable Gains Against Hunger Take Time
- Who Will Feed the Future? The Role of Poor Rural Producers
- Food Aid Convention: Contributing to Global Food Security
- The Challenge to Feeding the Future: Capacity Building at USAID
- CARE'S Shouhardo Program in Bangladesh
- Land Reform in Cambodia
- Reference
- Acknowledgements
- Download
- Interactive Data
- Multimedia
- Study Guide
- Media Room
- Blog
Data Menu
- Interactive Data
2010 Menu
- Hunger 2010
- Issues
- Data
- Full Report
- Executive Summary
- Table of Contents
- President's Foreword
- Chapters
- Introduction
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Key Points
- Housing Policy: The Shaky Foundation
- Tax Policy: Defaulting on the Dream
- Health Care Policy: The Golden Hour
- Education Policy: Failing to Make the Grade
- The Subprime Bomb Explodes
- Striking a Balance on Housing Policy
- Refundable Tax Credits
- Incentives to Build Savings
- Tax Reform in 2010
- Health Care: The Impact of Inequality
- Universal Health Care, the Basics
- Why U.S. Health Care Costs So Much
- Ruined by the Status Quo
- The History of Health Care Reform
- The Need to Address School Financing
- Inequality is Everyone’s Problem
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Key Points
- Recovery and the Global Economy
- Climate Change and Global Development
- A Global Agreement on Climate Change
- Technology Transfer
- The Politics of Climate Change
- Making the Connections
- A Unified Approach to Adaptation and Development Assistance
- Women and Climate Change
- Trade and Climate Change
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Download
- Stories
- From the Report
- On the Margins in Urban America: The South Bronx, New York City
- Learning the Skills to Compete in Construction
- A Living Wage in San Diego
- The Savings Net
- Abriendo Puertas: Opening the Doors of Educational Opportunity
- Job Training, Hunger Relief, and a New Start in the Nation’s Capital
- Central Appalachia: The Back Story
- Harlem Children's Zone
- In South Florida, Mortgages to Build American Dreams
- Community Food Security in New Orleans
- On the Margins in Rural America: Crow Creek Indian Reservation, South Dakota
- Seeds of Hope in Perry County
- Wind Power in Indian Country
- World Vision's Youth Empowerment Project
- Your Stories
- Tell Yours
- From the Report
- Multimedia
- Study Guide
- Media Room
- Blog