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Anonymous's blog By Charlotte Broyd and Francis Peel Partnership for Child Development, Imperial College London Each year on 16 October World Food Day aims to increase understanding of problems and solutions in the drive to end hunger, malnutrition a ...


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Anonymous's blog This post by senior fellow Roger Thurow originally appeared on the Outrage and Inspire blog.   Rasoa Wasike delivers the good news with a broad smile: “We are controlling the diseases of malnutrition, like kwashiorkor, marasmus,” she ...


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Anonymous's blog Photo courtesy of the One Acre Fund blog. One Acre Fund is an NGO in Kenya, Rwanda, and Burundi that helps 137,000 smallholder farmers grow their own way out of poverty by providing a "market bundle" that includes education ...


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Anonymous's blog This post by senior fellow Roger Thurow originally appeared on the Outrage and Inspire blog.  MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE “Where is the outrage?,” came the plea in London at the conclusion of a parade of alarming statistics on child ...


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Anonymous's blog By Hon. Prof. Ruth K. Oniang’O Ph.D. Founder and Editor-in-Chief, African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development For more than three decades, I have advocated for the African woman smallholder farmer. The farmers of ...


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Anonymous's blog By Nimna Diayaté This was originally posted on Feed the Future's Blog.   When I first got the idea back in 2008 that the women farmers like myself in central Senegal should join together to help one another succeed, I never woul ...




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Anonymous's blog Farmers of the Faulu group in Bungoma South, Kenya, stand proudly in front of Beatrice Masila’s sorghum that has now grown taller than they are! Beatrice will harvest her sorghum in the coming month. Photo by Kelvin Owino and the One ...