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With research staff from more than 60 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Kalyani Raghunathan

Kalyani Raghunathan is Research Fellow in the Poverty, Gender, and Inclusion Unit, based in New Delhi, India. Her research lies at the intersection of agriculture, gender, social protection, and public health and nutrition, with a specific focus on South Asia and Africa. 

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Where we work

IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 80 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

From theory to practice: The latest in program implementation and effectiveness at #MNF2023

Open Access | CC-BY-4.0

Micronutrient Forum 6th Global Conference, The Hague, the Netherlands, & Online, 16-20 October 2023

By Mduduzi Mbuya and Deanna Olney

As we race against time to combat nutritional challenges and unlock human potential, we have the power to reverse the fate of many and end hidden hunger. Imagine a future in 2030 when our accomplishments are celebrated, rather than lamenting our missed opportunities. The Micronutrient Forum’s 6th Global Conference, taking place online and in person in The Hague October 16-20, offers a significant opportunity to shift the current trajectory towards a better future. 

With the theme, “Nutrition for Resilience,” this conference serves as a platform for united action. But how can we achieve this lofty goal in an increasingly complex and crisis-prone world? As co-chairs of Track 3 for the conference, we have had the privilege to work with colleagues to curate a program that helps us find solutions to the interconnected challenges across food, social protection, health, and other systems that constrain progress. 

GAIN
Mduduzi Mbuya, second from left, and GAIN colleagues visiting a poultry farm in Rwanda, hearing about innovations in scaling up egg production and distribution.

We are excited first about the approach. Track 3 focuses on navigating the complexities of dietary and nutrition solutions, while considering scientific rigor, on-field implementation, and policy linkages. This year, the conference will convene diverse voices, including implementers, researchers, academics, decision-makers, and advocates to address key topics. 

These topics include dietary patterns, food safety, food fortification, micronutrient data gaps, program design, implementation science, monitoring and evaluation, as well as sustainability and scalability of successful approaches. Discussions will aim to prioritize resilient micronutrient programs, robust data systems, integration and scalability for improved diet, nutrition, and health outcomes to ultimately build individual, population, and system resilience. 

IFPRI
Deanna Olney, center rear, with the Helen Keller International & IFPRI Burkina Faso Enhanced Home Food Production Evaluation Team.

Recent findings suggest that hidden hunger affects far more people than previously believed. Track 3 will explore how key stakeholders can strengthen interventions across health, social protection, and food systems, deliver them to achieve their full potential, and secure the necessary financing for their implementation. Our discussions will center on community engagement, logistics, research, innovation, and how to move from efficacy to effectiveness at scale. 

Second, we are excited about the content of the sessions in Track 3. We will delve into topics such as effectiveness of large-scale food fortification, measuring impact and lessons learned from multisectoral nutrition programs, social assistance integration and effectiveness, and the requirements for sustaining and scaling successful approaches. 

Effective implementation, backed by evidence, and focused on scale and scalability, can transform lives. MNF 2023 will convene experts to ideate and find ways to transform our health, social protection, and food systems, and together, we will step closer to 2030, re-energized in our mission to make a difference. We look forward to charting this course with you online and in The Hague. 

Mduduzi Mbuya is Director of Knowledge Leadership at the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition, GAIN USA; Deanna Olney is Director of IFPRI’s Nutrition, Diets, and Health Unit. They are Co-Chairs for Track 3 of the Micronutrient Forum’s 6th Global Conference Program Committee. This post first appeared as part of the Exclusive #N4R Previews blog series on the Micronutrient Forum website.


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