Edmonton Social Planning Council

Category: Social Issues: Hunger

  • 2007 Hunger Count

     

    Title:Hungercount 2007
    Corporate Author: Canadian Asociation of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:2007
    Language:English
    Mterial Type:Electronic Resource

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/2007 HungerCount2007.pdf

  • 2006 Hunger Count

     

    Title:HungerCount 2006
    Corporate Author: Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Food Banks Canada
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:2006
    Abstract:

    HungerCount is a national survey of food bank use in Canada. Initiated in 1989, HungerCount has been conducted on an annual basis since 1997. Each year, we invite every food bank in Canada to participate in order to provide an up-todate national portrait of food bank use and hunger. As the only study of its kind in Canada, HungerCount is a unique measure of assessing hunger in the country. It is important to note that many individuals and families who are food insecure do not use food banks or other charitable food programs. As such, food bank use alone underestimates the extent of the problem nationwide.

    Language:English
     
    Material Type:Report

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/2006 HungerCount_2006.pdf

  • 2004 Hunger Count 2004

    Title:HungerCount 2004: Canada’s only annual survey of food banks & emergency food programs.

    Variant Title:Poverty in a land of plenty : towards a hunger-free Canada
    Corporate Author: Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:2004
    Abstract:

    HungerCount is a leading barometer of hunger, food insecurity and poverty in Canada.The only annual measure of hunger and food insecurity in Canada, it is a snapshot in time: one month in the life of 517 food banks across Canada.

    Language:English
     
    Material Type:Report

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/2004 Hungercount2004.pdf

  • 2003 Hunger Count 2003

     

    Title:HungerCount 2003: Something has to give : food banks filling the policy gap in Canada.
    Corporate Author: Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:2003
    Abstract:

    The Canadian Association of Food Banks’ (CAFB) HungerCount survey is the only annual measure of hunger and food insecurity in Canada. Food banks in every province and territory, from rural and urban areas alike, participate by providing data on the extent of emergency food bank and food program use in their communities. The information they provide captures 75% of emergency food recipients who are relying on more than 639 food banks and 2,648 affiliated agencies across the country to meet the most basic of needs. This vast and diverse network of non-governmental providers shares one common experience above all others: recipients depend on them because they do not have sufficient income to purchase the food they need for themselves and their families. At the same time, food banks are the first to acknowledge that they are not the appropriate vehicle for ensuring that the right to food is realized.

    Language:English
    Material Type:Report

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/2003 Hungercount2003.pdf

  • 2002 Hunger Count 2002

     

    Title:HungerCount 2002: Eating their words : government failure on food security.
    Variant Title:Canada’s annual survey of emergency food programs
    Author(s):Wilson, Beth|split|Tsoa, Emily
    Corporate Author: Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:2002
    Abstract:

    The HungerCount study is a national survey of food bank use in Canada. Initiated in 1989, the HungerCount study has been conducted on an annual basis since 1997. Each year, we invite every food bank in Canada to participate in order to provide an up-to-date national portrait of hunger and food insecurity. In the past, food bank use was the only measure available for assessing the extent of hunger and food insecurity in Canada. However, recent national population surveys have found that many more individuals than those occupying food bank lines lack the financial resources to access an adequate diet. According to the National Population Health Survey (NPHS) and the National Longitudinal Study of Children and Youth (NLSCY), most food insecure individuals and families do not use food banks or other charitable food programs, despite need. While food bank studies include many marginalized people that are excluded from population studies (due to the use of telephone surveys), food bank use alone underestimates the extent of food insecurity and hunger nationwide. As such, findings from this current study may best be viewed as the tip of the iceberg with respect to hunger and food insecurity in Canada. Within a domestic context, hunger and food insecurity are best understood as consequences of extreme poverty. In this land of plenty, a radically unequal distribution of resources underlies the existence, extent and depth of poverty across the country. Like homelessness, hunger and food insecurity emerge when social policies fail to ensure an adequate standard of living that meets basic needs. The annual HungerCount provides a means of evaluating the progress of governments with respect to ensuring income security, food security and an adequate standard of living for all.

    Language:English
    Material Type:Report

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/2002 Hungercount2002.pdf

  • 1998 Hunger Count 1998

    Title:HungerCount 1998
    Corporate Author: Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Subject:Food security – hunger, health|split|Food security – statistics, studies
    Publisher:Canadian Association of Food Banks
    Place of Publication:Toronto
    Date of Publication:1998
    Abstract:

    The main purpose of the HungerCount survey is to determine the number of people assisted by food banks throughout Canada. Therefore, the survey also provides a perspective on hunger in Canada. The survey provides other information as well, including the level and type of assistance rendered by food banks, income sources of the households assisted, and additional information pertaining to the operation of food banks across the country.

    Language:English

    Material Type:Report

    F. SOCIAL ISSUES/F.15 HUNGER/1998 hungercount1998.pdf