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 MoreIt’s Feed the Future Week,and all week we’ll be celebrating progress and partnerships made possible through the initiative’s innovative model for development. Feed the Future’s progress wouldn’t be possible without our partners—governments, private companies, universities and research partners, other donors and civil society. Read on as we celebrate the vital partnerships that have contributed to impact across the globe.
Maximizing Efforts through Private Sector Partnerships
Through Feed the Future, the U.S. and other donors have pledged to do business differently so we can help nations meet their agricultural potential and end global hunger and poverty in our lifetimes. How will we get there? In part, by working with the private sector to drive agriculture-led economic growth, and by viewing food producers as budding entrepreneurs themselves.
At the center of this model is our commitment to engage the private sector in meaningful, catalytic ways. That’s why Feed the Future has formed alliances with many U.S. and multinational companies, as well as local and regional companies to expand our reach into some of the world’s most remote, but productive regions. These dynamic partnerships are leveraging millions of dollars in private capital for inclusive agricultural development and nutrition efforts and promoting growth in new markets.
More than ever, governments and other donors agree that none of us can go it alone. Ending hunger, poverty and malnutrition will require new innovations and market-based solutions to some of the world’s toughest challenges. Together with our private sector partners, we can rise to the task and create a food-secure 2030.
Click on the links from partners below to learn more about how the private sector is promoting growth to #endhunger by 2030:
This post is part of our Feed the Future Week blog series celebrating the many partner groups that contribute to ending global hunger, extreme poverty and undernutrition. Check back throughout the week for more posts!
Check out our other posts on host-country governments, civil society and NGOs, research and universities, and donors and the U.S. Government.
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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