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- Nicholas Freudenberg, Sara Goldrick-Rab, and Janet Poppendieck.
- Nicholas Freudenberg and Janet Poppendieck are with the CUNY Urban Food Policy Institute at the City University of New York Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy. Sara Goldrick-Rab is with the Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice and the Department of Policy, Organizational and Leadership Studies, College of Education, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA.
- Am J Public Health. 2019 Dec 1; 109 (12): 1652-1658.
AbstractOver the last decade, multiple studies of food insecurity among college students have found rates from 20% to more than 50%, considerably higher than the 12% rate for the entire US population.Reasons for higher rates of food insecurity among college students include a growing population of low-income college students, high college costs and insufficient financial aid, more financial hardship among many low- and moderate-income families, a weak labor market for part-time workers, declining per capita college resources, and Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) policies that specifically exclude many college students from participation.This essay reviews the causes and consequences of food insecurity on campus, explores reasons for the low SNAP participation rate, and describes how campuses have responded to food insecurity. It summarizes federal, state, and local changes in SNAP policies that can facilitate college student participation and retention and suggests strategies for more robust and effective university responses to food insecurity, including SNAP enrollment campaigns, a stronger role for campus food services, and a redefinition of the goals and purposes of campus food pantries.
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