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Child Hunger

GRAN'S POSITION ON Child Hunger

Child hunger is a critical problem within the broader issue of global hunger because of how children are impacted by malnutrition. Children -- particularly those under the age of five -- have unique nutritional needs to ensure their healthy development.  Malnutrition in these crucial developmental years can irreparably harm a child’s future, causing permanent damage to their cognitive development, physical growth and health, and endangering their very survival. Chronically malnourished children risk facing lives marked by illness, compromised learning, and poverty, with consequences that extend across generations.

According to UNICEF, more than a quarter of the world's children under 5 are living in severe food poverty, and fully two-thirds of the world’s youngest children are not getting all the essential nutrients they need to grow and to thrive. 1  Globally, when a child dies, half the time the underlying cause is malnutrition.2

All-of-GRAN Campaign for 2024/2025

GRAN is committed to focusing on child hunger for this next phase of advocacy on the Right to Food. We will dedicate our efforts to raising public awareness to influence public opinion in support of action to address child hunger at home and in the Global South.

  • Check out our Small Sips series for some of the learning we have undertaken to date. 
  • Keep an eye on our Learning Events page for upcoming webinars as well as recordings of past webinars on global hunger and food security.
  • Go to our Take Action page for concrete actions you can take for global food justice.
  • And continue scrolling down this page for our growing library of resources on Child Hunger.


 

 

 

World Food Day 2024

Oct 15, 2024

“Everyone should have access to enough, nutritious, diverse, affordable, and safe foods.”  -- FAO October 16 is marked each year as World Food Day. This year the UN invites us to focus on foods... Read more

Dismiss Grannies at Your Peril!

Aug 20, 2024

"Dismiss ‘grannies’ as frail old biddies at your peril: they’re some of the toughest activists out there." In an opinion piece in The Guardian, writer Sally Feldman challenges "granny" stereotypes... Read more