
The Road to a Hunger-Free America
Selected Writings of Mark Winne
Mark Winne(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Publisher)
Published on 16. October 2025
Book
Hardback
224 pages
979-8-7651-3235-7 (ISBN)
Description
Curated from hundreds of Mark Winne's articles, blog posts, and speeches, this book documents 20 years of progress against the rampages of the industrial food system.
Beginning in the 1960s, the United States slowly awakened to an entirely new way of thinking about its most life-sustaining ingredient-food. Understanding the link between health and diet drove millions to a greater consciousness about their eating. Learning that the American food system had been captured by large corporations that practiced industrial forms of agriculture and food manufacturing spawned the organic farming movement, farmers' markets, and an intense pursuit of locally grown food. The revelation that tens of millions of Americans were hungry and malnourished evoked public outrage and cast the spotlight on how racism and poverty bitterly shaped the lives of so many.
Mark Winne has not only borne witness to these events, but also actively worked to find solutions to the many failures that have wracked the system. Each of the essays in this book is about one or more facets of the American food system, including hunger and food insecurity, diet and health, race and justice, farming, climate change, and sustainability. Organized by people, places, and actions that have had noteworthy impact on the food movement over the past two decades, these pieces demonstrate and encourage positive and effective responses to a growing list of challenges to food security, sustainability, and health.
Beginning in the 1960s, the United States slowly awakened to an entirely new way of thinking about its most life-sustaining ingredient-food. Understanding the link between health and diet drove millions to a greater consciousness about their eating. Learning that the American food system had been captured by large corporations that practiced industrial forms of agriculture and food manufacturing spawned the organic farming movement, farmers' markets, and an intense pursuit of locally grown food. The revelation that tens of millions of Americans were hungry and malnourished evoked public outrage and cast the spotlight on how racism and poverty bitterly shaped the lives of so many.
Mark Winne has not only borne witness to these events, but also actively worked to find solutions to the many failures that have wracked the system. Each of the essays in this book is about one or more facets of the American food system, including hunger and food insecurity, diet and health, race and justice, farming, climate change, and sustainability. Organized by people, places, and actions that have had noteworthy impact on the food movement over the past two decades, these pieces demonstrate and encourage positive and effective responses to a growing list of challenges to food security, sustainability, and health.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 222 mm
Width: 145 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
421 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-7651-3235-7 (9798765132357)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Mark Winne is senior advisor to the Center for a Livable Future at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA. He is cofounder of the Community Food Security Coalition, where he also worked as the Food Policy Council Program Director. He is the author of Stand Together or Starve Alone: Unity and Chaos in the U.S. Food Movement (Praeger/Bloomsbury, 2017).
Content
Forward by Sara Elnakib
Introduction: Mapping the Journey; Building the Foundation
Part I: Places
Great Falls, Great Food, Great Gaps: The Tale of Paterson and Ridgewood
New Roots Community Farm: "This is the coolest place I've ever been!"
Laredo Shows the Way to a Mending Wall
Roadkill Stew, Bad-ass Cabbage, and the Midnight Sun - Lessons from Alaska
Huerta del Valle - An Ontario Oasis
Where's the Rage?
Troubled by Paradise
Israel's War on Palestinian Olive Farmers
Part II: People
A Rainbow of Farmers
I Have Seen the Future of Medicine: It Is Doctor Yum
It's Not Easy Being a Commercial Egg Farmer
My Dinner with Embry
New Jersey = Tomato
"I'm Tired of Watching Our Town Die"
Two Million Angry Moms and One Sociologist: Free For All: Fixing School Food in America
George McGovern: A Man Ahead of His Time
Part III: Actions
When Handouts Keep Coming, the Food Line Never Ends
Welcome to the Weight Wars
Love in the Time of Corona
The Poetry of Community Food Assessments
Food Co-ops: A Faith Renewed
Twenty-Five Years of Food Security, Good Food, and Empowerment
The Most Important Word in "Community Gardening" is not "Gardening"!
Conclusion: The Journey Continues; The Tasks Are Clear
References
Introduction: Mapping the Journey; Building the Foundation
Part I: Places
Great Falls, Great Food, Great Gaps: The Tale of Paterson and Ridgewood
New Roots Community Farm: "This is the coolest place I've ever been!"
Laredo Shows the Way to a Mending Wall
Roadkill Stew, Bad-ass Cabbage, and the Midnight Sun - Lessons from Alaska
Huerta del Valle - An Ontario Oasis
Where's the Rage?
Troubled by Paradise
Israel's War on Palestinian Olive Farmers
Part II: People
A Rainbow of Farmers
I Have Seen the Future of Medicine: It Is Doctor Yum
It's Not Easy Being a Commercial Egg Farmer
My Dinner with Embry
New Jersey = Tomato
"I'm Tired of Watching Our Town Die"
Two Million Angry Moms and One Sociologist: Free For All: Fixing School Food in America
George McGovern: A Man Ahead of His Time
Part III: Actions
When Handouts Keep Coming, the Food Line Never Ends
Welcome to the Weight Wars
Love in the Time of Corona
The Poetry of Community Food Assessments
Food Co-ops: A Faith Renewed
Twenty-Five Years of Food Security, Good Food, and Empowerment
The Most Important Word in "Community Gardening" is not "Gardening"!
Conclusion: The Journey Continues; The Tasks Are Clear
References