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Feeding the Future - News in RSSMore than 1 billion people suffer hunger today, according to the UN. A crucial part of this complex problem is food production and distribution. Is it possible to increase food production in an environmentally and socially sustainable way? Can modernisation, research and investment enhance food security? Is there anything to learn from traditional knowledge? How do trade and energy policies affect the equation? And gender? Where and when is food aid really needed? Can the upswing of commodity prices be positive for some countries? How are farmers coping with climate change?

IPS finds the stories behind the current food crisis to understand local and global causes of shortages and rising prices, and their long term effects.

Mexico: Food Emergency
Food security in Colombia
Food and Agriculture Organisation
World Food Programme
IAASTD
FEWS NET - Famine Early Warning Systems
Global Information and Early Warning System
Oxfam on Food Aid
Food Aid Convention
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The contents of this news coverage, including any funded by the European Union, are the sole responsibility of IPS and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union.
FOOD CRISIS
Farming the Future
Environment
Biodiversity - One Planet - 1.4 Millon Species
Kyoto on the Horizon
Millennium Development Goals
Commodities' Return
Subsidies
From Aid to Trade with Africa -- Fact or Fiction?
News in RSS
POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
ECONOMY: Greek Crisis Impacts the Balkans
U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
NIGERIA: Acting President Consolidates Power Amid Unrest
CLIMATE CHANGE: A Year On, Little Change in Political Climate
LATIN AMERICA: Still a Long Way to Go, for Black Women
ZAMBIA: School Policy for Teen Mothers a Partial Success
KENYA: Trying to Rebuild Communities After Floods
IRAN: New Budget May Add to Uncertainties, Political Strains
Q&A: Sri Lanka Remains Defiant of U.N. Chief
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Q&A: Tapping Women's Enterprise to Topple Rural Poverty
Paul Virgo interviews YUKIKO OMURA, new vice president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development
ROME - Employees at the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) may have cause to fear for their jobs after Yukiko Omura was appointed vice president of the United Nations' rural poverty agency in February.
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BALKANS: Farming Prospers as Farmers Suffer
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - Official statistics put Serbian agriculture as the single most productive branch of the economy and one that not only survived the financial meltdown but chalked up a record trade surplus of almost a billion US dollars in 2009.
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DR CONGO: Will Poultry Project Live up to Expectations?
By Emmanuel Chaco
KINSHASA - For some seven million Congolese living in Kinshasa the only meat and poultry they could buy to eat since the 1980s was frozen imports from Western countries, distributed locally by a few local businessmen.
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BULGARIA: Govt Forced Down on Genetically Modifed Crops
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Campaigning by environmental groups and the general public has weakened the determination of the Bulgarian government to allow the cultivation of genetically modified (GM) crops in this country.
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DEVELOPMENT: Free Hungry Mouths of Red Tape
By Paul Virgo
ROME - Developing countries must tone down the booming voice bureaucrats have in policies and target corruption if commitments to defeat hunger are to be turned into action, leaders and experts at a United Nations meeting said Wednesday.
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HAITI: Food Crisis Looms
By Paul Virgo
ROME - Haiti's misery after last month's earthquake will be compounded by a food catastrophe if the international community continues to ignore the country's agricultural needs, the United Nations has warned.
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COTE D'IVOIRE: Policy Changes Revive Poultry Industry
By Fulgence Zamblé
ABATTA, Côte d'Ivoire - Ivorian poultry producers are enjoying strong growth thanks to the imposition of a tax on imports of poultry products from the European Union and South America.
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RELIGION: Fighting Hunger - A Matter of Faith
By Paul Virgo
ROME - The world's major religions might disagree on theology and matters like the foods we ought to eat and the days we should rest on, but when it comes to fighting hunger, they see eye to eye.
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Q&A: ''There's a Limit to Fish Harvesting''
David Cronin interviews ISABELLA LÖVIN, Swedish fisheries policy activist
BRUSSELS - The perilous state of the world’s fish stocks has received less media attention than the more visible, palpable environmental problems like air pollution. Isabella Lövin is seeking to redress that balance. Her 2007 book ‘Tyst hav’ (Silent Seas) hit the best-seller list in her native Sweden, garnering her three awards, including the title of 'Journalist of the Year'.
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PERU: Women Combine Invention, Tradition to Improve Rural Diets
By Milagros Salazar
PAUCARÁ, Peru - Although Huancavelica is the poorest region of Peru, it has more than just poverty, malnutrition and unmet needs. There are also women using their creativity, efforts and traditional indigenous knowledge to improve the diets of their families and communities.
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KENYA: Insuring Pastoralists Against Increasing Risks
By Susan Anyangu-Amu
NAIROBI - The droughts in the Turkana region were less severe when she was growing up, says Laura Letapalel, and pastoralists could still find some grass and water for their animals. Now, she laments, the droughts are longer and there is nothing to eat.
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DEVELOPMENT: Hunger Feeds More Hunger
By Paul Virgo
ROME - German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche was way off the mark when he wrote the famous line "what does not destroy me, makes me stronger" - at least when it comes to hunger.
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U.S.: Community in Crisis Looks to its Agricultural Roots
By Kyra Ryan
TAOS, New Mexico - Renowned for its historic Native American pueblo, cultural ties to Spain, bohemian artists, and world-class ski resort, Taos is also one of the many communities in the U.S. facing food insecurity.
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MALAWI: Green Belt Initiative Taking Shape
By Charles Mpaka
BLANTYRE - Let the rains fail, even for several successive seasons, and Malawi should still be able to produce enough to feed itself.

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AGRICULTURE: Three-Quarters of Hungry Are Rural Poor
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - Climate change, associated with a four-fold increase in natural disasters in the last decade, and the growth of world population, which is expected to reach nine billion by 2050, pose new challenges for aid initiatives like those of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
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