For billions across the world, the daily challenge is to find enough to
eat to survive. Hunger is on the rise globally with more than 1.2
billion people suffering from food insecurity and poverty and rising
food prices increasingly jeopardising access to food. But what are the
causes for global hunger? And as the global population soars, what are
the key food challenges? In this deeply informative study, Majda Bne
Saad identifies the causes for global hunger which are embedded in the
current economic system, apportioning blame for global hunger on the
West's continuing support for and subsidies to biofuels, which have
created persistent and formidable new demands for food commodities. Saad
proposes we fight-back, arguing for a 'second green revolution' to grow
more food and by analysing the factors constraining low-income nations
from achieving food security, she considers policies which could
generate income and enhance individuals' entitlement to food.