Resistance to the trade and “aid” policies that displace farmers and increase hunger.
Hunger. Pollution. Instability. Obesity. The problem with corporate food--by the numbers.
Meet the man who’s convincing the country, and the new President, that the next economy needs to be green and just. Interview by Sarah van Gelder.
Schools, fresh foods, and memories from India. Madhu Suri Prakash reflects on the culinary traditions of her family.
Artist Nikki McClure adds her touch to our collection of mealtime prayers from around the world.
The lush landscape of Hawai‘i once offered abundant food. What can these islands teach us about food and sufficiency?
Tenants’ rights groups are taking action to protect renters from eviction when banks foreclose on property owners. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, renters make up an estimated
This photo series by Michael Bowman for YES! Magazine shows folk-legend Pete Seeger at his home in Beacon, New York, overlooking the Hudson River, in December, 2007.
Photographer Michael Bowman is a historian by education, which he says explains his fascination with old buildings, cars and technology.
His work can be seen at www.desolateplaces.com. His flickr photo postings go under the moniker of DuffSuds.
With the housing crisis nationwide driving struggling families from their homes, Boston’s creative Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative shows how communities can hold their ground.
Puanani Burgess tells the story of one student with a gift—a gift our schools are not cultivating.
What I learned about happiness during my mom's last days with cancer.
Dee Williams doesn't need a big house to be happy. Instead she found happiness in a 84-square foot house on wheels.
"No Impact Man" suspected the holidays would be just as merry without all the stuff.
Stop this happiness! Before it’s too
late.
Most human beings are not couch potatoes and whiners. We are doers and creators. In fact, humans need to 'make a dent.'
A better economy doesn't necessarily mean a happier country.
Scientists can tell us how to be happy. Really. Here are 10 ways, with the research to prove it.
The food crisis is only getting worse. The answer involves a deep shift in the way our food comes to us. By making local governments pay attention to hunger, a range of organizations, working on everything from local food purchasing programs to farmers markets, are shaping the future of food.
David Solnit was one of the Direct Action Network organizers for the 1999 WTO demonstrations in Seattle. He looks at what really happened in Seattle, what politicians and the mainstream media have done with the story, and what difference the new movie "Battle in Seattle" might make to public thinking about the 1999 demonstrations.
Providing food for people in need – regardless of whether they are “deserving” is a central part of Sara Miles' spiritual journey. St Gregory's food pantry in San Francisco.
Kate Sheppard recounts how she found common ground with her father, a conservative farmer. Environmental policies work for all.
Large majorities of Americans agree on some of the most important issues of the day, from health care to war. "Ten Policies for a Better America" shows an agenda most of us can agree on—whether we think of ourselves as red, blue, or some other political color.
Surging prices, stagnant wages, spiraling debt. This is what stuck feels like.
Americans are under increasing economic pressure, and many feel powerless to do anything about it. David Sirota travels coast to coast and finds the people who know the U.S. is headed in the wrong direction--and are joining a populist uprising to turn it around
An agenda that puts people first.
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