Type | Book |
Title | Achieving a nutrition revolution for Africa: the road to healthier diets and optimal nutrition |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 2015 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
Publisher | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) |
URL | https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8124553/file/8124565 |
Abstract | Never before has so much attention been paid to nutrition in development dialogues and planning. In the early design of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP), the important role nutrition plays in achieving development goals was recognized, but little thought was given to how to integrate nutrition into agriculture and development investment plans. However, several key international events and commitments following the 2007– 2008 food price crisis raised awareness of the need to improve nutrition in order to achieve international, regional, and national development and growth targets. This awareness is articulated in the Sustainable Development Goals and echoed in various strategic African Union policies, strategies, and plans, including the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063, the AU 2014–2017 Strategic Plan, and the three Malabo Declarations (2014) relating to nutrition. Other African Union Commission (AUC) initiatives support this commitment, including the CAADP Nutrition Initiative that commenced in 2011, and the African Regional Nutrition Strategy 2015–2025 (ARNS 2015–2025). In addition, 37 African countries are involved in the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement. While many first generation CAAPD programs included food security and nutrition (FSN) programs and activities, nutrition was not well integrated, and monitoring and evaluation systems for assessing the impact of these interventions on nutrition of vulnerable groups were not always included. Some nutrition indicators have now been incorporated in the CAADP Results Framework and can be monitored as part of CAADP implementation progress; CAADP indicators can also complement monitoring that countries are conducting in relation to SUN movement activities. Some countries have already developed common results frameworks for this purpose. Focusing the 2015 Annual Trends and Outlook Report (ATOR) on nutrition will contribute to a broader understanding of the critical role of nutrition in achieving international, continental, and national economic growth targets through agriculture, food security, and nutrition. This report presents information and analysis in support of evidence-based policy making that should inform the second generation of CAADP national investment plans now being developed. This is an important moment for shaping the region’s future and ensuring that the much-needed agriculture-led growth and development agenda can simultaneously deliver on improving nutrition, saving lives, improving productivity and health, and curbing nutrition-related diseases and the associated public health expenditures. These investment plans should address not only the usual elements of undernutrition but also widespread micronutrient deficiencies (termed “hidden hunger”) and the growing problem of overweight and obesity that is associated with economic growth. |
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