Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food

Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food

by Jill M. Dieterle Professor of Philosophy, (Editor)
Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food

Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food

by Jill M. Dieterle Professor of Philosophy, (Editor)

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

Who has access, and who is denied access, to food, and why? What are the consequences of food insecurity? What would it take for the food system to be just?

Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food presents thirteen new philosophical essays that explore the causes and consequences of the inequities of our contemporary food system. It examines why 842 million people globally are unable to meet their dietary needs, and why food insecurity is not simply a matter of insufficient supply. The book looks at how food insecurity tracks other social injustices, covering topics such as race, gender and property, as well as food sovereignty, food deserts, and locavorism. The essays in this volume make an important and timely contribution to the wider philosophical debate around food distribution and justice.




Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781783483877
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 11/09/2015
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

J.M. Dieterle is Professor of Philosophy at Eastern Michigan University. She has published articles in Public Affairs Quarterly, Bioethics, Environmental Ethics, Philosophia Mathematica and Erkenntnis.

Margaret Crouch, Professor of Philosophy, Eastern Michigan University; J.M. Dieterle, Professor of Philosophy, Eastern Michigan University; Liz Goodnick, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Metropolitan State University of Denver; Stephen Minister, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Augustana College; Mark Navin, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Oakland University;; J. Michael Scoville, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Eastern Michigan University; Nancy E. Snow, Professor and Director of the Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing, University of Oklahoma; Jennifer Szende, Postdoctoral Fellow, Centre de Recherche en Éthique de l’Université de Montreal; Steve Tammalleo, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of San Diego; Paul B. Thompson, WK Kellogg Chair in Agricultural, Food and Community Ethics, Michigan State University; Shakara Tyler, Graduate Student, Michigan State University; Lori Watson, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of San Diego; Nancy Williams, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Wofford College; Ian Werkheiser, Assistant Professor, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgements / Introduction: J.M. Dieterle / Part I: Food Access / Chapter 1: J. Michael Scoville, "Framing Food Justice" / Chapter 2: Stephen Minister, "Food, Hunger, and Property" / Chapter 3: J.M. Dieterle, "Food Deserts and Lockean Property" / Chapter 4: Jennifer Szende, "Food Deserts, Justice, and the Distributive Paradigm" / Part II: Food Systems / Chapter 5: Ian Werkheiser, Shakara Tyler, and Paul Thompson, " Food Sovereignty: Two Conceptions of Food Justice" / Chapter 6: Mark Navin, "Food Sovereignty and Gender Justice: The Case of La Vía Campesina" / Chapter 7: Steve Tammelleo, "Food Policy, Mexican Migration, and Collective Responsibility" / Part III: Food and Gender / Chapter 8: Lori Watson, "Food is a Feminist Issue" / Chapter 9: Nancy M. Williams, "Meat Eating and Masculinity: A Foucauldian Analysis" / Chapter 10: Margaret Crouch, “Food, Film and Gender” / Part IV: Local Food / Chapter 11: Nancy E. Snow, "'Food Virtue': Can We Make Virtuous Food Choices?" / Chapter 12: Liz Goodnick, "Limits on Locavorism" / About the Authors / Bibliography
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