Country Profiles 2025
In 2025, we fought hunger and malnutrition in 54 countries around the world and ran in-country programmes in 52 countries. Explore our programme and emegrency work country-by-country in our Country Profiles 2025.
Knowledge Against Hunger is the home of all our technical, research, learning and strategic documents. Take a look through our publications here.
In 2025, we fought hunger and malnutrition in 54 countries around the world and ran in-country programmes in 52 countries. Explore our programme and emegrency work country-by-country in our Country Profiles 2025.
Explore a snapshot of our global network's work in 2025. Discover progress stories, case studies, and information on our work in 54 countries around the world.
In 2025, we fought hunger and malnutrition in 54 countries around the world and ran in-country programmes in 52 countries. Explore our programme and emegrency work country-by-country in our Country Profiles 2025.
Explore a snapshot of our global network's work in 2025. Discover progress stories, case studies, and information on our work in 54 countries around the world.
Action Against Hunger’s Nutrition Information Services provide direct and remote support with the planning and implementation of nutrition assessments.
This document outlines the Action Against Hunger UK Nutrition Strategy for 2025–2030.
Our Global Impact Report is a snapshot of our global network's work in 2024. It features progress stories, case studies, and information on our work in each country.
Our Global Impact Report is a snapshot of our global network's work in 2023. It features progress stories, case studies, and information on our work in each country.
This case study is part of a compendium of country-level case studies produced by the Delivery System for Scale project that explore promising, context-specific approaches to scale the management of wasting treatment for children under five. In Chad, where the availability of use of nutrition commodities is a major concern, UNICEF and its implementing partners developed an approach to integrate key end-user monitoring (EUM) indicators into the routine programmatic reporting system for treatment of child wasting.
This case study is part of a compendium of country-level case studies produced by the Delivery System for Scale project that explore promising, context-specific approaches to scale the management of wasting treatment for children under five. In Somalia, Save the Children, in partnership with DesignHealth and the Somaliland Ministry of Health and Development piloted the integrated community case management “plus” (ICCM+) approach - representing the first-known operationalimplementation of ICCM+ model in the Horn of Africa region and in Somalia.
This case study is part of a compendium of country-level case studies produced by the Delivery System for Scale1 project that explore promising, context-specific approaches to scale prevention and treatment of wasting for children under five.
The report highlights a lack of reliable, standardized evidence on the costs and value for money of acute malnutrition treatment, calling for clearer methods and guidance to inform better policy and investment decisions.