Growing Up Empty: How Federal Policies Are Starving America's Children
Books / Paperback
Books › Social Science › Sociology › General
ISBN: 0060954868 / Publisher: Harper Perennial, December 2003
The author of the landmark study Starving in the Shadow of Plenty draws attention to a rise in childhood hunger and starvation in the United States, noting a withdrawal of federal assistance and an increase in emergency food requests and calling readers to action. Reprint. 15,000 first printing.
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Growing Up Empty is a study of the hidden hunger epidemic that still remains largely unacknowledged at the highest political levels and "an unforgettable exploration of public policy, its failures and its victims" (William Raspberry, Washington Post). Twenty years after Ronald Reagan declared that hunger was no longer an American problem, Schwartz-Nobel shows that hunger has reached epic proportions, running rampant through urban, rural, and suburban communities, affecting blacks, whites, Asians, Christians and Jews, and nonbelievers alike.Among the people we come to know are the new homeless. Born of the "Welfare to Work" program, these working poor have jobs but do not make enough to support their families, such as the formerly middle-class housewife reduced to stealing in order to feed her children, or the soldier fighting on our front lines while his young wife stands in bread lines and is denied benefits and baby formula at a military health clinic.With skillful investigative reporting and a novelist's humanitarian eye for detail, Schwartz-Nobel portrays a haunting reality of human suffering that need not exist. A call to action, Growing Up Empty is advocacy journalism at its best.
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