The world produces enough food to feed humanity.
So why does hunger still exist?
Hunger Algorithms is a deeply reflective and globally relevant examination of food insecurity, poverty, inequality, political systems, global economics, technology, and human responsibility in the modern age. Rather than treating hunger as a simple shortage of food, Gabriel S. Ayayia reveals how hunger is often produced, maintained, and reinforced through complex social, economic, political, and institutional systems.
This book challenges readers to rethink the global food crisis through difficult but necessary questions:
- Why do millions go hungry while food waste continues to rise?
- Why does abundance coexist with starvation?
- Is hunger truly a natural problem — or a systemic one?
- How do policies, markets, power structures, conflict, and inequality shape who eats and who suffers?
Blending philosophy, food ethics, environmental thought, political reflection, human-centered analysis, and global development perspectives, Hunger Algorithms explores the invisible systems behind food distribution, agricultural control, economic exclusion, and survival itself.
From food waste and global supply chains to poverty, climate change, governance, technology, and human dignity, this book exposes the hidden architecture of hunger in the twenty-first century.
Bold, urgent, and intellectually engaging, Hunger Algorithms is both a critique of modern systems and a call toward ethical responsibility, justice, and human-centered solutions.












Reviews
There are no reviews yet.