Global Issue: Malnourishment and Hunger
Global Issue: Malnourishment and Hunger
Global Issue: Malnourishment and Hunger
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Malnourishment and Hunger
Background
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Currently there are 795 million people who do not
have enough to eat.
Long-term success to ending world hunger starts
with ending poverty.
With fighting poverty through proper training for
employment, education and the teaching of cooking and
gardening skills, people who are suffering will be more
likely to get jobs, earn enough money to buy food and
even learn how to make their own food to save money
Background
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There is enough food in the world to go around but
almost a billion people go hungry every day and a
further billion people are undernourished – not getting
enough of the vitamins and minerals they need to live
healthy and productive lives.
By 2050 the world will have another 2 billion
mouths to feed. Changing consumption patterns,
climate change and growing numbers of shocks, such
as drought, price rises and conflict, are increasing the
risk of hunger in many places in the world.
Background
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Without enough to eat, people in developing countries
can’t even begin to work their way out of poverty. For children
especially, being hungry or malnourished means they can die
from common infections or suffer poor health in the long run –
limiting their ability to learn in school, work or progress. 165
million children under 5 suffer from chronic malnutrition.
We must respond to these challenges in a sustainable
way, making sure food is fairly distributed, helping people
access nutritious diets and avoiding damage to the environment
that would put future generations at risk.
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The General Analysis section provides a broad range of
articles and documents on hunger and food issues.
The Emergency Food Relief System addresses the
most acute food crises that arise from war, natural disasters and
famine. Coordinated by the United Nations, with the World
Food Program as the top provider, the system accomplishes
much. But it falls tragically short, at a time of rising need. Food
assistance often arrives too little and too late. Donor countries
like to dump subsidized agricultural surpluses, damaging small
producers in recipient areas.
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The globalized Trade and Food Production
System leads to increased industrial agriculture and
contributes to speculation in agricultural commodities. It
pushes small farmers into monocrop production,
reducing local food security. Biofuels have diverted very
large quantities of land and production away from basic
food crops.
The system of agricultural Land Ownership has
grown steadily more unequal, as financial pressures
concentrate landholdings.
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An international policy process, coordinated by the
United Nations, has been considering systemic reforms. Major
meetings in Rome in late 2009 made modest progress. But
much remains to be done to achieve real food security and
sustainable production. Control over land and inceasingly-
scarce water are key issues. A vigorous alliance of NGOs,
agronomists and food producers has been pressing for
progressive change. Opposing them are the
large agribusiness companies, like Monsanto, Cargill,
McDonalds and ConAgra -- companies that now dominate food
policy, reign over the production chain and shape the entire
world's food system.
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