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In response to the editorial, “Food Stamp Nation,”  published in the Wall Street Journal on January 20, 2012, WhyHunger’s Alison Cohen, Director of Programs, wrote the following letter to the editor which was published in print and online in the Journal today. WhyHunger shares one voice with Alison. We believe food stamps are working as designed: increasing the food purchasing
Written by Christine Bell, WhyHunger Intern This post is part of WhyHunger’s Peer Mentor profile series for the “Community Learning Project for Food Justice” (CLP).  Each week through April 2012, we’ll highlight a new CLP Peer Mentor and their contribution to creating a national learning/teaching community to support the growth and expansion of the food justice movement. Gardening Matters is
The following organizations have been working to reform trade, aid, and development policy through advocacy, and public education
Trade between nations, and international finance organizations that regulate trade (like the WTO), greatly impact food security and food sovereignty. These links detail the impacts these bodies have had, and also effective alternatives to this model
CONAMUCA will start a formal nutrition and feeding program to help more than 180 children receive the food they need to live more productive lives.
Children sang, danced and ate with WhyHunger and Hard Rock International representatives at CONAMUCA's training center, the future home of the children feeding program that Imagine campaign is supporting.
WhyHunger and Hard Rock International representatives stand in front of the feeding program center named after "Mama Tingo," a woman peasant who died while defending her land in the 1970s.
In response to the editorial, “Food Stamp Nation,”  published in the Wall Street Journal on January 20, 2012, WhyHunger’s Alison Cohen, Director of Programs, wrote the following letter to the editor which was published in print and online in the Journal today. WhyHunger shares one voice with Alison. We believe food stamps are working as designed: increasing the food purchasing
Written by Christine Bell, WhyHunger Intern This post is part of WhyHunger’s Peer Mentor profile series for the “Community Learning Project for Food Justice” (CLP).  Each week through April 2012, we’ll highlight a new CLP Peer Mentor and their contribution to creating a national learning/teaching community to support the growth and expansion of the food justice movement. Gardening Matters is
The following organizations have been working to reform trade, aid, and development policy through advocacy, and public education
Trade between nations, and international finance organizations that regulate trade (like the WTO), greatly impact food security and food sovereignty. These links detail the impacts these bodies have had, and also effective alternatives to this model
CONAMUCA will start a formal nutrition and feeding program to help more than 180 children receive the food they need to live more productive lives.
Children sang, danced and ate with WhyHunger and Hard Rock International representatives at CONAMUCA's training center, the future home of the children feeding program that Imagine campaign is supporting.
WhyHunger and Hard Rock International representatives stand in front of the feeding program center named after "Mama Tingo," a woman peasant who died while defending her land in the 1970s.