Special Interest: Disaster Preparedness
The cyclone that hit Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi has destroyed homes, schools, businesses and essential infrastructure. Survivors have lost everything and need our help.
More than 900,000 refugees still call Bangladesh home--one year after the majority fled escalating violence in western Myanmar.
WFP USA CEO Rick Leach and sr. director of public policy Chase Sova explain why unchecked food insecurity and growing poverty can produce deteriorating security and stability.
In a historic unanimous vote, members of the U.N. Security Council recognized for the first time that armed conflict and violence are closely linked to food insecurity and the risk of famine currently threatening the lives of millions of people.
WFP engineers are in a race against time to create safe land in the world’s largest refugee camp where the most vulnerable will be relocated before the next crisis strikes.
The monsoon season sets new challenges for people living in camps on the Bangladesh border.
In the face of immense challenges, some rural communities in Afghanistan are building their own resilience to natural disasters. Supporting other communities to do the same will transform the lives of millions who currently depend on assistance to survive floods and droughts.
We introduce you to five Mozambicans who recount how their lives intertwined with a historic humanitarian crisis that left WFP with no choice but to sound the alarm.
A behind-the-scenes look at how one coastal country is emerging out of crisis and confronting a future of climate change
What's it like to live in a country with terrain that is both breathtakingly beautiful and incredibly dangerous?
Haiti is ranked sixth on the list of countries most vulnerable to climate change. Here are five measures WFP is taking to be prepared with an immediate response in case of future disasters.
When it comes to hunger and poverty, climate change isn’t one problem—it’s many problems.