Global nutrition report digital toolkit
The world is off track to reach global targets on nutrition, but we can reverse that trend and end malnutrition by 2030.
The world is off track to reach global targets on nutrition, but we can reverse that trend and end malnutrition by 2030.
The Global Nutrition Report, an independent accountability mechanism for progress and action on nutrition, calls on all actors to make SMART Commitments to Nutrition Action—that is, commitments that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant,
This is a snapshot of the global status of nutrition for each year the report covers.
As we move into the post-2015 era of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the world faces many seemingly intractable problems. Malnutrition should not be one of them.
Table A4.1 Responses to the Global Nutrition Report (GNR) 2014 recommendations
Table A4.2 Did the Global Nutrition Report (GNR) 2015 meet the commitments made for it in the GNR 2014?
Table A5.1 Stunting and overweight evaluated by 2014 and 2015 Global Nutrition Report rules
Table A5.2 Prevalence of overweight and obesity in 2010 and 2014 and assessment of progress for all countries
As we move into the post-2015 era of the sustainable development goals (SDGs), the world faces many seemingly intractable problems. Malnutrition should not be one of them.
Good nutrition signals the realization of people’s rights to food and health. It reflects a narrowing of the inequalities in our world. Without good nutrition, human beings cannot achieve their full potential.
Nutrition is a powerful driver of sustainable development—it has the power to either propel the agenda forward or hold it back.
The Global Nutrition Report (GNR) provides a global profile and country profiles on nutrition for each of the United Nations’ 193 member states, and includes specific progress for each country.
First in an annual series that provides a global profile and country profiles on nutrition for each of the UN’s 193 member states