As global levels of hunger rise to record highs, WFP and the European Union continue to work closely together. This report details our partnership in 2021.
In 2021, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) in Sri Lanka assisted 183,683 people, including school children and people with pre-existing vulnerabilities and those economically affected by COVID-19, under four strategic outcomes.
This publication provides a summary of a technical consultation on the double burden of malnutrition, discussing policy implications and double-duty actions to be taken.
The strategy articulates WFP’s approach to social protection and offers a coordinating framework that outlines how the organization will contribute deliberately and systematically to collective efforts to achieve long-term national social protection goals.
The European Union is one of WFP’s essential partners. In 2020, they helped us scale up our operations to unprecedented levels, providing emergency and development funding to help us save and change lives across the globe. This report details our partnership.
Given the chronic food insecurity and malnutrition prevalent in the Southern African region, this paper analyses the role of food security and nutrition in social protection programming and in bridging the humanitarian- development divide using the COVID-19 experience of several countries in the region.
From June – November 2020, the World Food Programme piloted a new project in Damascus and Rural Damascus with the aim of supporting vulnerable Syrian families to improve their food security.
This report is a product of the first phase of the Social Protection Learning Facility partnership and focuses on lessons learned from WFP’s work in 2020 that are important for the social protection sector in the East Africa region going forward.
An overview of WFP’s role as the world’s leading humanitarian organization both saving and changing lives in the year it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
This decentralized evaluation of the Support for Strengthening Resilience of Vulnerable Groups in Ethiopia: The Fresh Food Voucher (FFV) Programme Expansion in Amhara Region, was commissioned by the World Food Programme (WFP) Ethiopia Country Office (ETHCO). This endline activity evaluation covers the FFV Programme FFV Programme Expansion 2018-2020 in Amhara region.
Occasional Papers are prepared by various WFP offices as background or reference materials ultimately leading to discussions around policy and programme activities.
This WFP study sought to explore how cash-based interventions (CBI) can contribute to achieving gender equality and women’s empowerment, as ends in themselves and for food security and nutrition outcomes.
The Year in Review describes WFP’s actions and achievements in serving people’s emergency, recovery and development needs in 2018. It covers WFP’s provision of vital, common platforms and services for the humanitarian and development community.
This country portfolio evaluation covered all the WFP operations in the Central African for the period 2012 to mid-2017. It assessed WFP’s alignment and strategic positioning, its strategic decision-making, and the performance of the portfolio as a whole.
A study on nutrition-sensitive social protection and its potential to enhance nutrition outcomes across the first 1,000 days in Central and Eastern Africa.
The mid-term decentralized evaluation of the Protracted Relief and Recovery Operation 200708 was commissioned by the WFP Colombia Country Office, and covered the period from June 2015 to March 2017.