FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals
Levels of acute hunger soared throughout 2020, with the total number of people experiencing crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity globally expected to far exceed 2019’s already staggeringly high figure of 135 million people. The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has further exacerbated pre-existing vulnerability due to intensifying conflict, historic flooding in some areas, an unprecedented desert locust upsurge, and economic crises. With or without famine declarations, some people are already dying of hunger. With the 2021 humanitarian appeal, FAO is highlighting the urgent need for funding which it will use to continue investing in the most vulnerable people and their livelihoods so that they can lead their future recovery and pull themselves out of acute hunger.
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Format: | Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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FAO ;
2021
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Online Access: | https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB3704EN http://www.fao.org/3/cb3704en/cb3704en.pdf |
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dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-CB3704EN2024-03-16T13:11:07Z FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals Revised version FAO Levels of acute hunger soared throughout 2020, with the total number of people experiencing crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity globally expected to far exceed 2019’s already staggeringly high figure of 135 million people. The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has further exacerbated pre-existing vulnerability due to intensifying conflict, historic flooding in some areas, an unprecedented desert locust upsurge, and economic crises. With or without famine declarations, some people are already dying of hunger. With the 2021 humanitarian appeal, FAO is highlighting the urgent need for funding which it will use to continue investing in the most vulnerable people and their livelihoods so that they can lead their future recovery and pull themselves out of acute hunger. 2023-04-27T13:34:43Z 2023-04-27T13:34:43Z 2021 2021-03-08T19:27:16.0000000Z Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB3704EN http://www.fao.org/3/cb3704en/cb3704en.pdf English FAO 2p. application/pdf FAO ; |
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English |
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Levels of acute hunger soared throughout 2020, with the total number of people experiencing crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity globally expected to far exceed 2019’s already staggeringly high figure of 135 million people.
The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has further exacerbated pre-existing vulnerability due to intensifying conflict, historic flooding in some areas, an unprecedented desert locust upsurge, and economic crises. With or without famine declarations, some people are already dying of hunger.
With the 2021 humanitarian appeal, FAO is highlighting the urgent need for funding which it will use to continue investing in the most vulnerable people and their livelihoods so that they can lead their future recovery and pull themselves out of acute hunger. |
format |
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet |
author |
FAO |
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FAO FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
author_facet |
FAO |
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FAO |
title |
FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
title_short |
FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
title_full |
FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
title_fullStr |
FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
title_full_unstemmed |
FAO in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
title_sort |
fao in the 2021 humanitarian appeals |
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FAO ; |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB3704EN http://www.fao.org/3/cb3704en/cb3704en.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT fao faointhe2021humanitarianappeals AT fao revisedversion |
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