Progress Against Poverty Week

Extraordinary Work During Challenging Times  

This year has been a difficult one for many, including a number of organizations within the InterAction alliance. Once possessing the resources to collectively work with local communities in 200 countries to build agricultural, educational, financial and health care capacities, many InterAction member organizations have been forced to shutter programs and furlough staff at a time when donor country assistance has either decreased or disappeared due to the global economic crisis.

During this year’s Progress Against Poverty Week, InterAction will salute the dedication of its members who are facing challenging times, but continue to work as best they can on the ground in the developing world to end global poverty, and discuss next steps for the alliance.

 

InterAction Viewpoints

Congress Talks About Importance of U.S. Participation in Fight Against Global Poverty

“The U.S. remains committed to the fight against global poverty. We recognize the hardships and suffering of the world’s poor and the disproportionate impact the global financial and food crises have had in the developing world. We will continue to support poverty alleviation programs that provide both immediate relief and long-term solutions to poverty.”

"The generosity of the American people is helping alleviate poverty for millions around the world, but there is much more we can do...I will continue working to help expand opportunities for the most vulnerable individuals to escape the cycle of poverty."
 

"Poverty is a social ill that transcends all borders, nationalities, genders and ethnicities. Across the globe, people suffer from lack of food, clean water and the bare necessities needed to survive. It is our moral obligation to alleviate this suffering and I will continue to work both as a member of Congress and a concerned citizen to reduce and eliminate poverty worldwide."

-- Senator Bob Casey (D-PA)

-- Congresswoman Nita Lowey (D-NY), Chairwoman of the State and Foreign Ops Appropriations Subcommittee

-- Congressman Adam Smith (D-WA)

   
 

Recent InterAction Statements on Reducing Poverty

Members and Partners Doing Extraordinary Work
 

  • Throughout the month of October, ChildFund International's "31 in 31" blog series is highlighting each of the countries where they are at work, sharing insights and introducing readers to some of the children they help through firsthand accounts from staff and beneficiaries.
  • The Living Proof Project is a multimedia initiative of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation intended to highlight successes of U.S.-funded global health initiatives. By reporting success stories back to the people who funded them - American taxpayers and their representatives - we hope to reframe the current global health conversation.
  • Credit with Education Program is Freedom from Hunger's worldwide strategy to bring self-help solutions to the fight against hunger--one family at a time. The program, first launched in West Africa in 1988, combines microcredit loans to very poor women with vital health and business education and has become recognized as a powerful and proven approach to helping families become food-secure. Freedom from Hunger's Impact of the Credit with Education Program prove that credit with education has an impact on the health and nutrition of the children.
  • In Guatemala, Bread for the World is Building More Than a School
  • The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) places great emphasis on achieving and measuring results in both its Compact programs and Threshold programs. MCC maintains this focus throughout these programs, concentrating on
    • identifying activities that have the greatest promise of poverty reduction through growth,
    • measuring progress during implementation, and
    • learning from its experiences.
  • The International Food Policy Research Institute's 2009 Global Hunger Index (GHI), below, shows that worldwide progress in reducing hunger remains slow. The 2009 global GHI, with a focus on the financial crisis and gender equality, has fallen by only one quarter from the 1990 GHI.

For more information on Progress Against Poverty Week, please contact Tawana Jacobs.