A Women Farmers’ Cooperative on a Mission to Decrease Hunger
In Nigeria, one woman is leading her community to use sustainable farming methods, as well as technology, to thrive. A group of women farmers in Nigeria play a pivotal role…
Read MoreFeed the Future, President Obama’s global hunger and food security initiative, invests in developing countries’ agro-food systems and works to improve nutrition for women and children, enabling people—many of them farmers—to grow, thrive, and build healthier lives for their families and neighbors.
By working with rural households worldwide, Feed the Future is dramatically improving the way the U.S. Government does business, facilitating effective, evidence-based, multi-stakeholder development and achieving lasting success in country after country.
In 2015, Feed the Future contributed to inspiring results:
These numbers are adding up to positive change, but we still need to nourish the millions of hungry families that live in the world today and find a way to sustainably feed the additional 2 billion people expected by 2050.
How will we do it? By focusing on people.
It’s About the People
Nimna Diayte, an agripreneur, heads a thriving farmers’ cooperative for maize producers in Senegal.
Gifty Jemal Hussein, a rural farmer in Ethiopia, gathered women in her village to join together and build a business through which they grow maize, tend a dairy cow herd, and save for the future.
Although these two rural women live on the opposite sides of the African continent, Nimna and Gifty have a lot in common (aside from growing maize). Through Feed the Future, they both transformed their lives—from making ends meet to helping feed their communities and beyond.
And they both met the President of the United States!
Nimna and Gifty made quite the impression when meeting President Obama. As thriving entrepreneurial farmers, their success stories show that when we empower rural farmers, a little goes a long way.
Nimna met President Obama during his visit to Senegal in 2013. Her cooperative’s 2,023 members from seven communes made more than $2 million in revenue that year from selling maize under Nimna’s leadership.
In Nigeria, one woman is leading her community to use sustainable farming methods, as well as technology, to thrive. A group of women farmers in Nigeria play a pivotal role…
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Read MoreWomen have always worked in agrifood systems, but these systems have not always worked for women. That’s because barriers have stood in their way, preventing them from making their fullest contributions. Last year, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) “Status of Women in Agrifood Systems” report showed us just how slow progress has been in closing the gender gap in agriculture over the past decade. Their access to irrigation, livestock, land ownership and extension services has barely budged over the past decade. Also, they are facing these challenges at a time of immense global shocks.
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