cover image Sweet Charity?: Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement

Sweet Charity?: Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement

Janet Poppendieck. Viking Books, $26.95 (354pp) ISBN 978-0-670-88020-1

Tens of thousands of programs across the U.S. distribute free food to the hungry, a type of charity, according to the author, that ""comes with a price tag."" In a hard-hitting, radical analysis of a national crisis, Poppendieck, director of Hunter College's Center for the Study of Family Policy in New York City, calls the food programs a Band-Aid approach to deepening poverty, which counterproductively relieves pressure for more fundamental solutions by enabling government to shed its responsibility for the poor. Poppendieck, who has participated in or observed food distribution programs in nine states across the country, meticulously investigates the factors she cites as driving people to the soup kitchen or food pantry: low wages, unemployment, high housing costs, homelessness, disability and shrinking public-assistance benefits. She calls for a nationwide political movement to pursue an antipoverty, antihunger agenda vigorously through a reformed tax system, affordable housing, a stronger federal safety net and vastly improved public education and training. This is a book to prick the nation's conscience. (Aug.)