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This website aims to reach a wide and diverse audience and to encourage that audience to engage in the hunger and vulnerability debate by promoting awareness, understanding and advocacy on social protection and social transfers, as well as build knowledge and understanding of the multi-dimensional character of poverty, hunger and vulnerability across Africa.


In Focus

  • 17 January 2012

    Lagos, the second most populated city in Africa, is an uncharacteristic ghost town today. The government’s decision to eliminate Nigeria’s costly but highly popular fuel subsidy program has sparked mass protests and unrest across the country as fuel costs have increased officially from $0.40/liter to $0.86/liter. On Monday morning, labor unions began a nationwide general strike that has brought Nigeria to a standstill.

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  • 22 November 2011

    As the original creator of Wahenga, the Regional Hunger & Vulnerability Programme (RHVP), fades into the mists of history, so Wahenga passes to its new owner, the Africa Platform for Social Protection. Nicholas Freeland, RHVP Programme Director, says farewell...

    Read Nicholas's final RHVP Comment here for more on this exciting transition!

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  • 4 October 2011

    This Overseas Development Institute (ODI) report draws on the RAPID Outcome Assessment methodology to examine the influence of the Regional Hunger and Vulnerability Programme (RHVP) on policy in southern Africa and shares lessons learned from these experiences.

    Read the report here.

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Wahenga Comments

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  • Nicholas Freeland
    22 November 2011

    As the original creator of Wahenga, the Regional Hunger & Vulnerability Programme (RHVP), fades into the mists of history, so Wahenga passes to its new owner, the Africa Platform for Social Protection. Nicholas Freeland, RHVP Programme Director, says farewell...

    more...     
  • Nicholas Freeland
    5 October 2011

    As RHVP draws to a close, a recent assessment of the Programme, facilitated by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), attempted to learn lessons about the degree to which RHVP had influenced social protection policy over the six years of its lifetime. Two things are clear: we may have rocked the boat and ruffled a few feathers, but when all is said and done, we have also made a significant and positive contribution to the social protection debate. Our Programme Director, Nicholas Freeland, takes advantage of the opportunity of the lesson-learning report to pen a valedictory comment, and to thank those that we have worked with ... and tangled with ... over the years!

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  • Afternoon ("PM") Teese
    27 September 2011

    PMT is a curse! Sisters, you all know that: inescapable, debilitating, emotionally draining, a regular cause of extreme irritability!
    But I refer here not to Pre-Menstrual Tension, but rather to a new form of PMT that is sweeping the globe: Proxy Means Testing. This variant of PMT is a method of selecting poor people to become beneficiaries of social transfer programmes, currently being advocated strongly by, among others, my good friends at the World Bank. But a recent paper, Targeting the Poorest, suggests that the reality is very different, and cautions policymakers strongly against the dangers of being steamrollered into the adoption of PMT. It suggests that the PMT approach is demonstrably deficient in many areas. This Wahenga Comment outlines those deficiencies.

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