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Full-Text Articles in Food Studies
Free To Serve? Emergency Food And Volunteer Labor In The Urban U.S., Maggie Dickinson
Free To Serve? Emergency Food And Volunteer Labor In The Urban U.S., Maggie Dickinson
Publications and Research
Since the 1980s, cutbacks to welfare programs, widespread economic insecurity, and increased federal funding for nonprofit agencies have led to a massive expansion of emergency food providers (EFPs) such as soup kitchens and food pantries across the United States. These anti-hunger organizations are often staffed exclusively or predominantly by volunteers who are empowered to care for their communities. But, like all caring labor, volunteer work is shaped by race, class, and gender inequalities. Hunger and poverty motivate poor women to become volunteers, and contradictions around how this labor should be remunerated, recognized, and regulated create conflicts within EFPs. By mobilizing …