
The Future of International Relief: Co-Creation With the Private Sector
As we move into the next decade, we need to re-imagine how we do our work. What technologies and approaches could we develop in the future to solve humanitarian crises?

As we move into the next decade, we need to re-imagine how we do our work. What technologies and approaches could we develop in the future to solve humanitarian crises?

Nonprofits have the tools and experience to heal the world, and expectations are high. We must do everything we can to live up to them.

Much as we are humbled by and proud of the Nobel Committee’s ultimate acknowledgment of all we’ve done, we are just as grateful to it for highlighting the growing need in the immediate future.

Hear one aid worker’s account of feeding a makeshift city of 1 million Rohingya refugees – and the new threats that loom.

More than 800 U.N. Volunteers have served with WFP in the past decade, helping us save lives in over 70 countries.

This is a “failure is not an option” moment. At a time when our own wellbeing is inextricably tied up with others’ around the globe, we will be better off only when others are, too.

Humanitarian advocate Rima Fakih and NYTimes columnist Nicholas Kristof joined WFP’s Valerie Guarnieri and moderator Femi Oke for a lively exchange on how this triple threat has upended the health and security of billions of people around the world.

Many people don’t realize the strong link between hunger and AIDS, but it is one of the major reasons why I became president and CEO of World Food Program USA.

Conflict, displacement, natural disasters: they’ve left 149 million people facing severe levels of hunger. Here’s why and how it happens.

WFP cameraman Marco Frattini reflects on his experience documenting the world’s largest humanitarian crisis in Yemen.