Monday, April 29, 2013

Foodopoly: the battle over the future of food and farming in America by Wenonoah Hauter

Wenonah Hauter is the executive director of Food & Water Watch, but she also runs an organic family farm in Northern Virginia that provides healthy vegetables to over five hundred families in the Washington, D.C., area as part of the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. Despite this, as one of the nation’s leading healthy food advocates, Hauter believes that the local food movement is not enough to solve America’s food crisis and the public health debacle it has created. In Foodopoly, she takes aim at the real culprit: the massive consolidation and corporate control of food production, which prevents farmers from raising healthy crops and limits the choices that people can make in the grocery store.

Through meticulous research, Hauter presents a shocking account of how agricultural policy has been hijacked by lobbyists, driving out independent farmers and food processors in favor of the likes of Cargill, Tyson, Kraft, and ConAgra. She demonstrates how the impacts ripple far and wide, from economic stagnation in rural communities at home, to famines in poor countries overseas. In the end, Hauter illustrates how solving this crisis will require a complete structural shift, a grassroots movement to reshape our food system from seed to table—a change that is about politics, not just personal choice.

355 pages (December 2012)

 
 
 
To find a discussion guide for this book in the NoveList Plus database, go to the Library's website, click on Novelist under "We Recommend" → "Book Services". Click on "Book Discussion Guides" in the right sidebar on NoveList's home page. Then, either enter the title in the Search box or search for the title alphabetically. (You will need your Salt Lake County Library card number to access this resource outside a county library.)
 
 
Review from SF Gate
 
 
 
Wenonoah Hauter TEDx talk:

Title Read-alikes: Salt, Sugar, Fat by Michael Moss; The End of Food by Thomas Pawlick; Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser; Fair Food by Oran B. Hesterman; Chickenizing Farms & Food by Ellen K. Silbergeld; No Happy Cows by John Robbins; Tomatoland by Barry Estabrook; Food Politics by Robert L. Paarlberg; Stuffed and Starved by Rajeev Charles Patel; Sour Heart by Jenny Zhang; and Bet the Farm by Frederick Kaufman.