Why the Hunger?
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We consider it intolerable that more than 800 million people throughout the world, and particularly in developing countries, do not have enough food to meet their basic nutritional needs. This situation is unacceptable.
- World Food Summit Declaration, Rome, 1996
Priviledge’s story is increasingly common in the countries of southern Africa where, especially in rural areas, a “combination of crippling drought, abject poverty, economic collapse, and high rates of HIV/AIDS has devastated communities and led to widespread food shortages,” according to the international humanitarian group Mercy Corps. In Priviledge’s town, Mercy Corps is working with local partners to provide a daily ration of food for school-age children and trying to strengthen farmer livelihoods in the country’s rural communities. But, in the larger context—and in a world where there is enough food for everyone—why is hunger still so pervasive and how can agricultural policies make a difference? Page 1 - Introduction Page 2 - The Global Food Supply Page 3 - The Future of Small Farms Page 4 - Is Bigger Better? Page 5 - The Debate over Seeds Page 6 - Examining Solutions PERSPECTIVES HOME: Farm to Table |



