Evaluation Insight Note
No hay miniatura disponible
Fecha
Autores
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Washington, DC: World Bank
Resumen
Descripción
The world is moving backward in its
efforts to end hunger, food insecurity, and malnutrition.
Reaching the Sustainable Development Goal 2, Zero Hunger,
targets by 2030 is becoming more challenging each year. In
addition to food price increases, most vulnerable people and
communities face a range of shocks that compromise their
food security. Disasters caused by natural hazards,
conflicts, disease and pandemics, financial and political
crises, and the impacts of climate change, all drive recent
food insecurity and malnutrition trends. The intensification
of these drivers will continue to challenge food security
and nutrition, therefore, broadening food security to better
insulate the vulnerable from medium- and longer-term impacts
is a useful adjunct to looking at immediate food assistance
needs. This Evaluation Insight Note (EIN) answers the
question: How has the World Bank integrated resilience into
food security operations The EIN includes five main
insights: (i) Food security operations are increasingly
focusing on resilience. (ii) Emergency operations designed
to address acute crises can, and increasingly do, include
resilience features. (iii) Closed projects with resilience
features achieved higher outcome ratings. (iv) Food security
projects with resilience features tend to have a longer time
frame to tackle the drivers of food insecurity with five
strategies: pairing various interventions, providing
emergency support and creating income opportunities
(productive inclusion); using decentralized approaches,
including community engagement; leveraging partners and
donor coordination; and strong analytics and design. (v) It
is critical to adapt the pace and sequencing of short- and
long-term reforms and measures to country capacity.
Palabras clave
FOOD SECURITY, RESILIENCE, EMERGENCY SUPPORT, INCOME OPPORTUNITIES
