Saturday, November 17, 2018



The Hunger Project


www.thp.org 



The Hunger Project was founded in 1977 after the first Rome World Food Conference.  From 1979-1986, the Hunger Project played an instrumental role is recruiting international support to prevent famines in Cambodia, Somalia, and the African continent.  In 1990, they partnered with the Planning Commission of India to establish the Strategic Planning in Action (SPIA), which is a holistic, people-centered approach.  According to their website, approximately 21,000 villages in Africa, Asia and Latin America have applied the SPIA approach to empower people to develop improvements in health, education, nutrition and family income (THP, n.d.).   Over the years, the Hunger Project has advocated and called attention to the issues of hunger and poverty.  “The Hunger Project’s designed a strategic direction to expand their scope via three key priorities: partnerships, advocacy, and impact” (THP, n.d.).

The Hunger Project stated that their “programs in 16,075 communities throughout Africa, South Asia and Latin America are based on an innovative, holistic approach, which empowers women and men living in rural villages to become the agents of their own development and make sustainable progress in overcoming hunger and poverty” (THP, n.d.).  The inspire people to move from “I can’t” to “I can” or “We can” by focusing on these three elements: “1. Empowering women as key change agents; 2. Mobilizing communities for self-reliant actions; and 3. Fostering effective partnerships with local government” (THP, m.d.)

As a explored the Hunger Project’s website, I discovered that approximately 896 million people in developing countries live a $1.90 a day or less.   It is well-known that poverty, food prices and hunger are linked.  Many are hungry and malnourished because they cannot afford to buy enough food, cannot afford healthy, nutritious foods, or afford the farming supplies and materials to grow their own food.  I, also, discovered that sadly over 30 percent of rural girls and 15 percent of urban girls living in poverty are kept out of school to save money.  The Hunger Project believes that a lack of general education leads to higher adolescent birth rates, which “over-burdens an already economically strained community” (n.d.).  All these factors lead to a continuing cycle of gender inequality, poverty, and hunger.

It is essential to build capacity of men and women to surpass poverty through education and training programs.  The Hunger Project offers such programs with the goal of “teaching the skills, methods, knowledge, and leadership needed to take self-reliant actions so they can meet their own basic needs, improve their communities and build better futures for themselves and their children” (n.d.). Educational programs for individuals living in poverty do not just provide access to knowledge and resources, they provide an opportunity for change and the ability for individuals and communities to be self-reliant and self-sufficient as they overcome poverty and hunger.

Reference:

The Hunger Project (THP). (n.d.) Retrieved November 17, 2018 from www.thp.org.

8 comments:

  1. Hey Donna!

    Thanks for sharing such detailed stastics regarding The Hunger Project. I don't think any children should be deprieved of their education because of their gender or economic status. I think there should be more projects advocating for change and against hunger in low poverty communities.

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  2. Donna,
    The Hunger project. Is very informative and detailed. Throughout my reading of your post I found similar situations about the children’s education based on children’s gender and economic status in most third world countries.

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  3. Very informative!
    It is essential to build capacity of men and women to surpass poverty through education and training programs...... I’ve realized that a common theme in issues regarding poverty education and training almost always seems to be the answer. Do you think this is a true claim or do you think it is conditional?

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  4. Donna,
    Thank you for sharing this organization. I noticed a similarity between The Hunger Project and CARE, the organization I explored. Both organizations focus on empowering girls and women to end gender inequality. I feel it is true that by educating and training men and women, they can have the opportunity to overcome poverty.

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  5. Thank you for your post, it is important to foster and create opportunities for growth and development especially for young girls.

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  6. Hi Donna,

    This is devastating! In the states you hear about people needing meals, I could not imagine this magnitude of hunger. Looking at your article makes me reflect and realize that it takes a lot of resources to end hunger and malnutrition. You need education, higher paying jobs, basic life skills, improved healthcare, and quality facilities and staffing, this needs to be done in millions of homes. This proves that it takes years to end.

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  7. Hello Donna
    This information made me feel sad about the people that are in need of food. I just wish these million dollar organizations would just step out there and truly help those in need. Let's think about others before ourselves

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  8. Hi Donna,

    What a great project the Hunger project. I have really enjoyed reading your blog and learning about how this project is supporting many different countries. Wow, when I read that 896 million people in developing countries live on $1.90 a day was beyond my understanding how these people survive. More so how it affects many children with not being able to go to school to save money. Awesome informational blog thank you so much sharing.

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