91自拍, in partnership with the Eleanor Crook Foundation (ECF), has released a new policy paper. This highlights the urgent and interconnected challenges of modern conflict, food insecurity, and malnutrition. It also looks at the critical role that integrated responses can play in breaking this cycle.
Despite decades of progress, malnutrition remains one of the leading threats to child survival. It is one of the most urgent and preventable threats to child survival globally. Recent global funding cuts risk reversing hard-won gains. Conflict is now the primary driver of acute food insecurity in the world鈥檚 most fragile contexts, disrupting food systems, displacing communities and restricting access to life-saving nutrition services.
The paper underscores how landmines and unexploded ordnance deepen these challenges. In many conflict-affected regions, unsafe land prevents families from farming. It blocks access to markets and health facilities, and undermines the recovery of local food systems.
"In fragile and conflict-affected states, food insecurity can intensify complex socio-economic, political and cultural pressures by deepening grievances, weakening community resilience, and
heightening social tensions that can spark unrest.
When conflict does erupt, it disrupts food systems, restricts access to nutritious food, and drives new waves of food insecurity."
The paper draws on evidence from Afghanistan, Angola, Ukraine and other conflict-affected countries. It demonstrates how demining can unlock agricultural recovery, strengthen food security and enable the delivery of essential nutrition services. In Angola, clearance has led to a 199% increase in crop income and a 58% rise in investment in agricultural inputs. This shows that safe land is a foundation for long-term resilience.
The policy paper sets out practical recommendations for the the UK Government, building on its global leadership in nutrition and humanitarian mine action. These include:
- integrating nutrition, humanitarian, development and peace-building strategies under the UK鈥檚 commitment to the Global Compact on Nutrition Integration
- scaling up support for nutrition services in conflict and post鈥慶onflict settings, including addressing gaps in ready鈥憈o鈥憉se therapeutic food
- embedding mine action within food security and nutrition strategies, recognising demining as a prerequisite for sustainable recovery
- leveraging platforms such as the Child Nutrition Fund to coordinate financing and accelerate delivery of life鈥憇aving supplies
- strengthening joint assessments and referral systems between mine action teams and nutrition services
More than two billion people live in places affected by violent conflict. This paper calls for a more coherent approach that aligns UK defence, diplomacy and development efforts. By integrating demining with nutrition and food security, the UK can deliver better value for money, support long鈥憈erm stability, and help communities rebuild.