Stop Hunger celebrates six years of partnership with the United Nations World Food Programme
This year Stop Hunger celebrates six years of partnership with the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
The Stop Hunger partnership with WFP is built around three priorities:
- The economic empowerment of women and local communities, principally through skills-based and technical trainings for female cooks involved in homegrown school feeding programmes, with the potential to reach 260,000 cooks across 60 countries;
- The development of local production and consumption systems, that enable the supply of locally sourced produce from smallholder farmers, to school canteens; and
- The response to emergency situations, particularly in some of the world’s most acute humanitarian crises, including Yemen, Syria and the Sahel. Over the past six years the partnership has helped provide more than 1 million emergency meals to people in 11 countries.
The World Food Programme wins the Nobel Peace Prize
In October 2020 WFP, the world's leading humanitarian organization fighting hunger, was named the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate.
This honour recognizes the extraordinary commitment of the thousands of WFP women and men who have worked in the field, for almost 60 years, to build a hunger-free world. It also marks WFP’s efforts to highlight the link between hunger and conflict.
We are proud that 44 Sodexo experts supported WFP with technical expertise to implement and improve its programmes in the field. From worldwide logisticians to local supply chain specialists, their contribution has helped WFP to better provide locally sourced school meals to children, which supports their educational attainment while helping empower people in need and strengthen social and economic opportunities for women.