000007698 001__ 7698 000007698 005__ 20231215152030.0 000007698 0247_ $$2DOI$$a10.6083/k643b184s 000007698 037__ $$aETD 000007698 245__ $$aFighting the good fight: food banks as social justice advocates? 000007698 260__ $$bMarylhurst University: Oregon Health and Science University 000007698 269__ $$a2016 000007698 336__ $$aThesis 000007698 502__ $$gFood Systems & Society 000007698 520__ $$aThis research addresses the problems of hunger and food insecurity through the analysis of food bank mission statements and programs. This research examines how food banks are addressing the issues of hunger and food insecurity through the programs they conduct. The intent was to discover the types of programs food banks operate that go beyond charitable handouts. This was accomplished using thematic and content analysis methods that were guided by grounded theory methodologies. Food bank mission statements and programs were analyzed to identify the orientations of food banks and their programs on a spectrum of charity to social justice. A total of 196 food bank mission statements were examined and were categorized into the three categories of charity, amelioration, and justice. The three categories make up the charity to social justice spectrum to which 64 percent of mission statements were categorized as charity, 30 percent as amelioration, and 6 percent as justice. A total of 99 programs from the food banks comprising the justice category were analyzed and categorized as either food distribution or non-food distribution. Non-food distribution programs representing nutrition education and transformative programs, characterized as addressing problems of poverty, were found to be social justice oriented. The most surprising finding was that occupational training programs were not justice oriented. Clients in occupational training programs were taught skills to enter low paying and seasonal jobs in the food service and agricultural sectors. Based on findings, a social-ecological model was used to situate food banks within the charity to social justice spectrum and to show how their orientations on the spectrum relate to hunger and food insecurity. 000007698 650__ $$aFood Insecurity$$013447 000007698 650__ $$aHunger$$020388 000007698 650__ $$aSocial Justice$$026110 000007698 6531_ $$afood banks 000007698 6531_ $$acharity 000007698 691__ $$aSchool of Medicine 000007698 692__ $$aGraduate Programs in Human Nutrition 000007698 7001_ $$aDraszt, Ty 000007698 8564_ $$9a941e21f-fde2-4d3b-ada3-f54a192904c5$$s923836$$uhttps://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/7698/files/Draszt.Ty.2016.pdf 000007698 905__ $$a/rest/prod/k6/43/b1/84/k643b184s 000007698 909CO $$ooai:digitalcollections.ohsu.edu:7698$$pstudent-work 000007698 980__ $$aFood Systems & Society