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Frances Moore Lappe

writer, activist

Frances Moore Lappe was born in Pendleton, Oregon. A graduate of Earlham College in Indiana, she was a 26-year-old trusting her common sense when she began the research that led to the publication of Diet for a *Small Planet (1971)*, a book which sold over three million copies and changed forever the way people think about food. Her little book showed that human practices, not natural disasters, cause worldwide hunger. Food scarcity results when grain, rich in nutrients and capable of supporting vast populations, is fed to livestock to produce meat which yields only a fraction of those nutrients. In *Food First; Beyond the Myth of Scarcity (written with Joseph Collins, 1977)* she went on to identify other causes of starvation: centralized control of farmland and economic pressures to produce cash crops rather than basic food products. A passion for the democratic process infuses her work as a co-founder of two national organizations: the Institute for Food and Development Policy based in California and the Center for Living Democracy, a ten-year initiative which encourages regular citizens to contribute to problem-solving in all dimensions of public life. In 1987 Lappe became the fourth American to receive the Right Livelihood Award, sometimes called the Alternative Nobel, for her vision and work healing our planet and uplifting humanity. In 2002 Lappe and her daughter, Anna, published *Hope's Edge; The Next Diet for a Small Planet.* Like other visionary leaders, Lappe sees hope as something to be lived not sought after: A lot of people think we find hope by marshaling evidence and proving there is grounds for it. But hope isn't what we find in evidence; it's what we become in action. It is not surprising, then, that her next book is called *Choosing Courage in a Culture of Fear. *