Chief Executive Officer, Food Basket Foundation International (FBFI) My work in nutrition My father, late Professor Isaac Olaolu Akinyele, was the founding Chairman of the Nigerian CSA, the Civil Society Scaling Up Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN) when it was unofficially established in 2013. Unfortunately, he died shortly after that in February 2014. After I returned […]
LeerTodas las noticias sobre la región África occidental y central
Meet the women of the CSN: Victorine Edson ANJARASOA
TAMAFA coordinatrice, Madagascar Je suis coordinatrice de l’association TAMAFA depuis 2003 jusqu’à ce jour. Je suis décidée à travailler sur la nutrition car il y a beaucoup d’enfants victime de la malnutrition chez nous à Madagascar, région Toliara. Stratégie pour élever les femmes au rang de leadership: il faut les responsabiliser et leur apprendre la […]
LeerMeet the women of the CSN: Beatrice Eluaka
Coordinator of CSS+UNN, Nigeria My work in nutrition I am Lead for the Scaling Up Nutrition’s programming in Nigeria. I perform Country Office Oversight, Country Program Development, Country project /program implementation and Country Program Representation whilst contributing to strategic and operational development and delivery of programs in line with the SUN CSN mandate, strategy and […]
LeerMeet the women of the CSN: Jane Whyte
Senior MEAL Officer, Nigeria My work in nutrition My name is Jayne Whyte and I work with the Civil Society Alliance in Nigeria as a Senior MEAL Officer. I think women’s nutrition and the role women play in scaling up nutrition is particularly important to me because women and girls are at the heart of development. […]
LeerPrioritising Youth Voices During the Year of Action for Nutrition for Growth
2021: A year overflowing with opportunities It’s 2021, and although very little may have changed so far in comparison to 2020 (come on, vaccines!), there has already been a huge shift: it is now officially the Year of Action for Nutrition. Last year, the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in devastating losses to the decades of progress on […]
LeerMEAL & SUS Grants: Skills development and empowerment project for Alliance SUN Côte d´Ivoire and its member organizations.
Every year, as part of the CSN small grant competition, we offer CSAs the chance to win a grant in order to foster and stimulate innovation and learning within the network. These MEAL & SUS grants are designed to focus on monitoring, evaluation and learning in order to create sustainable and long lasting work. This […]
LeerMEAL & SUS Grants: Nigerian Nutrition-Change Agency Program (NN-CAP) (A pilot)
Every year, as part of the CSN small grant competition, we offer CSAs the chance to win a grant in order to foster and stimulate innovation and learning within the network. These MEAL & SUS grants are designed to focus on monitoring, evaluation and learning in order to create sustainable and long lasting work. This […]
LeerHunger is real, staying home is not so real.
Daniel Ishaku’s COVID-19 story Daniel Ishaku is 16 years old and lives with six of his siblings in a one-bedroom house in an urban slum called Kapwa in Nigeria. Daniel lost his father when he was 4 years old, and his unschooled mother became the primary caregiver. In order to sustain and provide for her […]
LeerLessons from civil society resilience as we face COVID-19
“Adapt, Improvise, Overcome – the human spirit will always survive” These are the words of advice a colleague who worked in Ebola affected areas sent to me at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. I expected something much more technical and practical. He is right of course. At a certain point, it’s the spirit and […]
LeerWhat I’ve learnt from SUN nutrition champions
The SUN CSN Secretariat, along with our West and Central African nutrition champions, Action Contre La Faim, and representatives of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, have been working hard over the past few months to make sure that our West and Central Africa regional workshop is a resounding success. We are currently in Abidjan facilitating a three-day […]
LeerThe SUN CSN Secretariat, along with our West and Central African nutrition champions, Action Contre La Faim, and representatives of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, have been working hard over the past few months to make sure that our West and Central Africa regional workshop is a resounding success. We are currently in Abidjan facilitating a three-day workshop with representatives from 19 countries including Nigeria, Sierra Leone Senegal, Mali, Benin and Burkino Faso. A huge number of SUN delegates are in attendance and over the past few days, we have had some fantastic sessions on MEAL, nutrition advocacy and preparing for N4G.
It has been a huge learning curve for me, and it hasn’t helped my already over-saturated brain that the meetings have been in French. I find if I concentrate really hard, I can just about understand what people are saying. But as the laughter which followed my introductory sentence showed, my speaking leaves something to be desired. However, after two days of meetings and presentations, countless questions and a permanently bemused expression, there are a few things which have finally begun to sink in.
1. PEOPLE REALLY CARE ABOUT THIS WORK
And they should! If there is one thing which I will take away from this workshop, it is that everyone is working incredibly hard. From championing women in leadership roles in Sierra Leone to creating a proposed plan for universal health coverage in Mali, nutrition work at the national and sub-national level is happening all across West and Central Africa. Every representative we have heard from is fiercely passionate about the projects they are working on and are amazingly close to the work, all the way from community-level projects to encouraging heads of state to become nutrition champions.
2. CIVIL SOCIETY HAS A REALLY IMPORTANT ROLE TO PLAY
All of the representatives here work for Civil Society organisations but work closely alongside parliamentarians and donors to draw up and push for both nutrition-specific and sensitive plans. In areas where nutrition is sidelined, civil society organisations put pressure on policymakers to implement nutrition plans and their role cannot be underestimated.
3. DATA AND ACCOUNTABILITY ARE INCREASINGLY IMPORTANT
It seems obvious right? If you want to prove or measure the success of a project you should be able to quantify it. But as nutrition champions push for nutrition to play more of a role in government development plans, the role of monitoring and evaluating becomes ever more important. Using scorecards in some instances has been seen to improve the case for nutrition when put in front of ministers and leaders. Equally, with an increase in available data, we will be able to better demonstrate the extent of the problem in many countries.
4. BUDGET ANALYSIS IS ACTUALLY REALLY INTERESTING!
Now I’m not an economist (I know that will come as a shock to many of you). But being able to analyse a government budget and confirm which parts of the plan have been implemented is crucial when dealing with government nutrition plans. The process itself seems to involve a deep dive into government ministries development plans and, despite a lot of adding up, can also be a real insight into political decisions and changes.
Overall, it’s been very exciting to see nutrition champions from all over the region of West and Central Africa coming together to share ideas and agree on actions for the future of nutrition in the region and it has certainly encouraged me to practice my French.