
Our population is going to grow by 3 billion people in the next century. But if we play our cards right, none of them will go hungry.

Chef Homaro Cantu thinks that the berry could revolutionize the way we feed the world by making grasses and other wild bitter plants palatable.

Planting stress-tolerant rice in the developing world may yield 10 million more tons of rice annually—a big step towards eliminating world hunger.

When Pollan last ate a chicken nugget, whether Schlosser thinks that Walmart's new healthy food initiatives are for real, and what you and I can do.

Minnesota's the latest state to revoke driver's licenses from teens who drop out, but that might not be the answer to the dropout crisis?

You never hear people blaming bankers for the deadly rise in basic crop prices, but they share a good part of the blame.

The average household throws out $1,300-$2,200 worth of food each year. Here are five easy ways to reduce food waste...and save money!

American families waste tons—literally—of food every year. See how that stacks up around the world.

This new initiative fights ballooning restaurant portions, food waste, and hunger at the same time.
Meanwhile, a billion people face famine. How do we cut down on our astounding volume of waste? Guardian

"Swipes for the Homeless," a nonprofit organization founded at UCLA, has turned dining hall swipes into a means of combating hunger in Los Angeles.

Anonymous food critics, come out of hiding! Food is too important an issue for our smartest voices to lurk in the shadows.

FEED Foundation co-founder Ellen Gustafson is launching an ambitious 30-year project to change the food system, and she needs our help.

It's no secret that Americans are getting fatter. At the same time, more and more Americans don't have enough to eat.

Sugar, meat, and cereal prices reach record levels as economists warn of global food riots by Easter.

Bikes, as it turns out, can provide an important link between good, surplus food that would otherwise get wasted and the people who need it.

According to new research from Columbia University, a tired and hungry judge is a far less lenient judge.

Last Sunday, GOOD teamed up with Food Forward to pick fruit for hungry Angelenos. Here are the results.