April 30, 2020 | By Roger Thurow

Wait Just a Minute: Roger Thurow on Food Security

Roger Thurow, Council senior fellow for the Global Food and Agriculture Program, takes a minute to discuss how COVID-19 has affected food security and brought attention to hunger amid the abundance in the United States.

Wait Just a Minute: Roger Thurow on Food Security

How has COVID-19 affected food security?

What we’re seeing, very quickly, is how this health crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic, how quickly that health crisis has become a food crisis. Around the world! But that it’s also become a food crisis here in the United States as well, I think, is shocking to a lot of people.

Why is hunger an ignored issue in the United States?

Because frankly we choose to ignore it. It’s an affront to us! We have this vision of ourselves that there’s this eternal and everlasting abundance, “We’re the world’s breadbasket, we feed the world.” And now see, “Wait a minute, we can’t even feed ourselves!” and adequately provide nutrition for all the residents of the United States, which is what’s underlying these long lines that we’re seeing at the food banks and the food pantries. But the truth of it is those lines were always there.

What gives you hope?

What gives me hope is that now we see this, so that we have the recognition of this, and particularity say hunger in America that it won’t be ignored and shunted to the side. This need is always there. Now we realize that, we see it even more clearly, we’ve always should’ve seen it, but hopefully this really brings it to the fore.

About

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs is an independent, nonpartisan organization that provides insight – and influences the public discourse – on critical global issues. We convene leading global voices and conduct independent research to bring clarity and offer solutions to challenges and opportunities across the globe. The Council is committed to engaging the public and raising global awareness of issues that transcend borders and transform how people, business, and governments engage the world.

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs is an independent, nonpartisan organization. All statements of fact and expressions of opinion in blog posts are the sole responsibility of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Council.

Archive


The Legacy of M. Cherif Bassiouni

M. Cherif Bassiouni sadly passed away last week. Known as the “father of international criminal law” and a driving force behind the creation of international criminal tribunals, Bassiouni was tireless in his quest to bring justice to the victims of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in South Africa, Bosnia, Bahrain, and elsewhere.







| By Brian Hanson

Deep Dish: Who Will Help the Rohingya?

“Textbook ethnic cleansing” of the Muslim Rohingya minority continues in Western Myanmar. How do the internal politics of Myanmar, and it’s fragile democracy under Aung San Suu Kyi, explain the tepid response of the international community to this horrific attack on a forsaken people? Azeem Ibrahim, author of “The Rohingyas: Inside Myanmar’s Hidden Genocide,” joins Brian Hanson on this week’s Deep Dish.




| By Holly Copeland

Enhancing Communities through Public-Private Partnerships

When a community must address an issue that impacts the health, safety or quality of life for its neighbors, where is the best place to look for help? Is it the government or academic institutions? Perhaps it’s nonprofit organizations. Or maybe hope lies with local businesses.  Increasingly, for many issues that impact our world today, the answer is: all of the above.