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Actions Against Hunger

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BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER. STRATEGY 1 - NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS (IRON, FOLIC ACID AND CALCIUM) ... BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER. STRATEGY 2 - SCHOOL DINING ROOMS. They ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Actions Against Hunger


1
Actions Against Hunger
  • Peer Counselor
  • Hania Bethell
  • Members
  • Vikash Khatri
  • Michelle Miranda
  • Anne Wegener
  • Shohei Nakamura
  • Idrissa Nahantchi
  • Carlos Castro
  • Sutapa Bhattacharjee

2
Overview
  • Defining Hunger
  • Condition of Hunger in the World
  • The United Nations Millennium Project
  • Role of NGOs in Tracking Hunger around the world
  • Strategies to fight against hunger

3
Hunger
  • The term food insecurity relates to the condition
    that exists when people do not have physical and
    economic access to sufficient, safe, nutritious,
    and culturally acceptable food to meet their
    dietary needs and lead an active and healthy life
    (FAO 1996).
  • Hunger, Mal-Nutrition and Starvation are all used
    to describe aspects of this problem
  • FAO- United Nations Food and Agriculture
    Organization

4
Causes of Hunger
  • Unequal distribution of food
  • Poverty
  • Rising Food Prices
  • War
  • Natural Disasters
  • Disease Epidemics
  • Political and Economic Shocks

5
Unequal Distribution of Food
  • Around the world
  • In US

6
Poverty and Rising Food Prices
  • Buying power Decreasing
  • Leads to unequal distribution of food

7
War
  • People become homeless and poor during war and
    therefore become hungry
  • Ex. Burundi

8
Natural Disasters
  • People become homeless and poor.
  • Food becomes unavailable.

9
Political and Economic Shocks
  • Economy depends on political stability of a
    country.

10
What is happening around the world
  • Reduction on the proportion of hungry people
  • The absolute number has fallen slightly

11
Where are the Hungry People
12
Factors that can contribute to reduce mal
nutrition
  • Education
  • Food production
  • and access
  • Sanitation, health
  • facilities and water
  • Inequality and
  • exclusionary practices

Source Smith and Haddad (2000).
13
Impacts of Hunger
  • High rates of disease and mortality
  • Limited neurological development
  • Low productivity
  • Countrys ability to develop economically,
    socially and politically

14
The United Nations Millennium
Project commissioned by the UN Secretary General
and supported by the UN Development Group
15
Millennium Project
  • An independent advisory body of the UN
  • work together with Non- Governmental
    organizations (NGOs), national governments

16
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)?
Goal 1 Eradicate extreme hunger and
poverty Target Halve, between 1990 and 2015,
the proportion of people whose income is less
than 1 a day. Goal 2 Achieve Universal Primary
Education Goal 3 Promote Gender Equality and
Empower Women Goal 4 Reduce Child Mortality Goal
5 Improve Maternal Health Goal 6 Combat
HIV/AIDS, Malaria and other diseases Goal 7
Ensure Environmental Sustainability Goal 8
Develop a Global Partnership for Development
17
1 Move from political commitment to action
Political commitments to end hunger have
been made repeatedly but have not been
translated into action
  • Strengthen the contribution of donor countries
    and national governments to activities that
    combat hunger
  • Improve public awareness on hunger issues and
    strengthen advocacy organizations

18
2 Reform policies and create an enabling
environment
Government policies in poor countries can make
or break efforts to end hunger
  • Build developing country capacity to achieve the
    hunger goal
  • Increase poor peoples access to land and other
    productive resources

19
3 Increase the agricultural productivity
of food-insecure farmers
Small-scale farming families represent about half
the hungry worldwide and probably three-quarters
of the hungry in Africa
  • Improve access to better seeds and other planting
    materials
  • Improve soil fertility and water ability
  • Diversity on-farm enterprises with high-value
    products

20
4 Improve nutrition for the chronically
hungry and vulnerable
Adequate nutrition lies at the heart of the fight
against hunger. A targeted life-cycle approach is
recommended.
  • Promote mother and infant nutrition
  • Reduce malnutrition among children under five
    years of age and school-age children and
    adolescents

21
5 Reduce vulnerability of the acutely hungry
through productive safety nets
Hungry people are vulnerable to events and
influence that they cannot control.
  • Build and strengthen national and local
    capacities to respond to emergencies
  • Invest in productive safety nets to protect the
    poorest from short-term shocks and to reduce
    long-term food insecurity

22
6 Increase incomes and make markets work for
the poor
The food-insecure either cannot produce food
themselves or cannot afford to buy food.
  • Invest in and maintain market-related
    infrastructure
  • Improve access to financial services for the poor
    and food-insecure

23
7 Restore and conserve the natural resources
essential for food security
The degradation of natural resources directly
threatens the food security and incomes of poor
people
  • Help communities and households restore or
    enhance natural resources
  • Secure local ownership, access, and management
    rights to forests, fisheries, and rangelands

24
Investments needed
  • Only 5-8 of the total costs of achieving the
    goals is needed to reduce chronic hunger

25
Combination of actions
  • Most of the interventions act synergistically
  • e.g.
  • Community nutrition programs
  • Homegrown school feeding programs
  • Investments in soil and water
  • as entry points
  • It can be done

26
Role of NGOs in Tackling Hunger Around the World
27
NGO Non-governmental Organization

28
Who Funds the NGOs?
  • International Governments
  • Groups (Associations, Clubs, Unions,)
  • Individuals donors

29
How Do NGOs Act?
  • Food assistance
  • Breaking the circle of dependency
  • Nutritional teaching programs
  • Making agriculture and nutrition national
    priorities.
  • Combating poverty
  • Extending the power of technology
  • Promoting rural development
  • Tapping the power of trade

30
Two examples of Actions against hunger
  • Charity
  • Bogotá, Colombia
  • Self-reliance
  • Tokyo, Japan

31
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • BOGOTA, CAPITAL OF COLOMBIA
  • Population 6,861,499
  • 55 live in poverty
  • 3,800,559 people
  • 17 live in destitution 1.166.455
    people

32
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • 55 OF THE POPULATION IS POOR. THATS A LOT!
    WHY?
  • Unequal distribution of wealth
  • Displaced people
  • Unemployment
  • Mismanagement of resources

33
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • OVERALL APPROACH
  • The conviction that it is possible to work firmly
    in improving the quality of life of the habitants
    of the city, especially of the most vulnerable
    groups.

Bogotas Mayor Lucho Garzón (founder of the
program)
34
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • STRATEGY 1 - NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS (IRON,
    FOLIC ACID AND CALCIUM)
  • Program orientated to pregnant women, nursing
    mothers and to the children with low weight.
  • It reduces low weight, malformations, preborn
    deaths and

35
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • STRATEGY 2 - SCHOOL DINING ROOMS
  • They will be pedagogic spaces of meeting
  • Contribute to the good performance in the
    educational system.
  • Work 365 days of the year.
  • Its supported by the government, and the
    community.

36
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • STRATEGY 3 - COMMUNITY DINING ROOMS
  • The food will prepared and given to poor persons.
  • They are located in 6 strategic places of the
    city.
  • They are spaces of meeting for families and
    communities,
  • They will be attended by community organizations
    and unemployed persons of the community who, in
    remuneration, will receive portions of food for
    their family.

37
BOGOTA WITHOUT HUNGER
  • STRATEGY 4 - COOPERATIVE SHOPS OF FOOD
    DISTRIBUTION
  • They are small markets with basic food
  • The margins of marketing will be minimal.
  • The products will offer without packing with the
    wished volume, in such a way that the persons
    could acquire the basic goods in the quantity
    that they can pay

38
Actions Against Hunger in Tokyo
  • SUPPORT FOR THE SELF RELIANCE
  • Population 12.000.000
  • Homeless people 5521 (year 2000)
  • Homeless people 3402 (year 2007)
  • Exists since 2001
  • Budget 3.2 billion JPY, (32 million USD) per year

39
Actions Against Hunger in Tokyo
  • PROCESS
  • 1 Emergency,
  • The goverment provides the homeless with shelter,
    food, clothes and health

40
Actions Against Hunger in Tokyo
  • Process
  • 2 Rehabilitation
  • Life guidance
  • Job training
  • The goverment fixes up a job
  • Shelter for 1 5 months

41
Actions Against Hunger in Tokyo
  • Process
  • 3 Self reliance
  • After rehabilitation they need to move to a
    private house

42
Actions against hunger in a combined way
  • Giving food support to people
  • Giving the chance to be self reliant

43
Actions against hunger in Bangladesh
  • Full Name The Peoples Republic of Bangladesh
  • Capital Dhaka
  • Population 140 million
  • Number of villages 64000
  • Poor people 40 of people live under poverty
    line

44
Actions against hunger in Bangladesh
  • Grameen Bank is providing micro credit to women
  • World Food Program provides the direct food
    support.

45
Actions against hunger in Pakistan
  • Full name Islamic Republic of Pakistan
  • Population 163.9 million
  • Capital Islamabad
  • Poverty nearly one-quarter of the population is
    classified poor as of October 2006
  •  

46
Actions against hunger in Pakistan
  • President Rozgar scheme
  • WFP is proving the free lunch for the girl
    children in the school.

47
Actions against hunger
  • At the end of the day.
  • Let us hope for a bright future.

48
Actions Against Hunger
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