The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) has been publishing some of its older books online for free in .pdf format. For example, the 1993 book on The Political Economy of Food and Nutrition Policies, edited by Per Pinstrup-Andersen, contains a chapter (.pdf) on the politics of the U.S. Food Stamp Program, written by Margaret Andrews and Katherine Clancy.
The chapter explores the reasons for the growth in the nation's leading food assistance program between the mid-1960s and the mid-1990s. What explains the Food Stamp Program's growth? Was it to dispose of agricultural surpluses? Was it vote-trading or "logrolling," in which urban legislators agreed to vote for farm programs in return for rural votes for food assistance? Was it a consequence of the Civil Rights movement and the growing democratic strength of the poor? My quick summary of the chapter: some of each explanation. But the details are interesting.
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- New study on FDA website casts doubt on qualified ...
- The 23rd post meme: "What is the government speech?"
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- Post Hurricane Katrina statement on budget and nut...
- FDA chief Lester Crawford resigns suddenly
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- Help get junk food out of Massachusetts schools
- Posters for McDonald's and childhood obesity
- Steven Block awarded Seers Prize
- What's the story?
- How far has your food traveled?
- Dean's letter for Tufts Nutrition
- Debating agricultural subsidies and nutrition
- Information sources for community food security
- The political economy of food stamps
- Chris Mooney: The Republican War on Science
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- San Francisco Examiner used restaurant reviews to ...
- Obesity and preschoolers
- Ruskin and Schor: Who's to Blame for Childhood Obe...
- Labor conditions for California's farm workers
- What's the harm in promoting dairy weight loss?
- Charlotte's Web
- New USDA report supports controversial dairy weigh...
- Children's nutrition and competitive foods in schools
- Monsanto's fan mail for Bitter Greens Journal
- Federal food assistance programs during the disaster
- Katrina
- Welcome Fuddruckers customers!
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September
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Thursday, September 15, 2005
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