The World Food Programme (WFP) is a UN agency dedicated to ending hunger, achieving food security, and improving nutrition by 2030. It focuses on emergency relief, assisting in development and social operation. The WFP works in conflict-affected countries as well as where hunger and malnutrition are most likely.
Projects
Operational Research for WFP’s Food assistance for Assets (FFA) Program in Sri Lanka
Background: The World Food Programme (WFP) and IFPRI have been collaborating for several years to increase the impacts of WFP’s programs on diet, nutrition and……
Transfer Modality Research Initiative (TMRI)
From 2012 to 2014, IFPRI partnered with the World Food Programme on a two-year pilot safety net program – the Transfer Modality Research Initiative (TMRI)……
Publications
Brief
Improving resource targeting in Niger: Joint financial analysis and food system mapping
Abstract
An assessment of dietary patterns and micronutrient intake among farming adults in Rural Sri Lanka
Abstract
Nutrient intake and diet quality impacts of a nutrition-sensitive resilience program in Sri Lanka
Events
Irregular Migration and Food Security: A View from West Africa
Event: July 20, 2023 – 9:30 AM- 11:00 AM EDT. This seminar will present study results and the website, with discussion by researchers from IFPRI, WFP, and MIT as well as other experts.
Research Findings on Resilience & Social Cohesion in Burkina Faso and Niger
Virtual Event: July 11, 2023 – 9:00 AM- 10:30 AM EDT. WFP, IFPRI and IPD are jointly offering this webinar to disseminate the study’s findings on social cohesion in Niger and Burkina Faso to create an opportunity for interested actors to discuss their feedback and the way forward.
Global Report on Food Crises 2021: Building resilience to prevent food crises and conflict
Experiences and strategies that can build food systems resilience to prevent food crises and conflict.
Watch video
Blogs
Dietary diversity among men and women in rural Sri Lanka
Insights into the food pyramid.
A bureaucratic catch-22: Study in Bangladesh shows how safety nets can overlook the poorest
An IFPRI analysis identifies flaws in criteria used to target the poorest aid recipients and recommends new standards.