Area of intervention
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), food security exists when “all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life”. Food security is based on four major elements: availability, access, utilization and stability of these three components over time.
However, improving food availability, access and utilization is not enough. Individuals must be able to access the foods they need in acceptable quantities from a nutritional point of view. The health environment in which people live is also a determining factor in how these foods are consumed.
Livelihoods include all the resources, i.e. the capabilities and assets (both material and social) and activities that a household needs to live.
The sustainable livelihoods approach is primarily concerned with the capital endowments of livelihoods, or assets of the household (or individual, or groups of livelihoods). There are several categories of livelihood capital:
Sustainable livelihoods are one of the main sources of resilience within a household or community, reducing their vulnerability to disasters, food insecurity and poverty while contributing to their empowerment.
On the field, Première Urgence Internationale deploys three types of Food security and Livelihood activities:
Preparing for a food distribution in Gaza © Première Urgence Internationale
Cooking training in Myanmar © Première Urgence Internationale
Working the land in DRC © Première Urgence Internationale