Dear colleagues,

The recording of the GODAN webinar on UK Food Poverty: Measurement and Risk 
Mitigation is available at 
https://www.godan.info/news/uk-food-poverty-measurement-and-risk-mitigation


On behalf of the Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition, I would like 
to thank Dianna Smith for sharing this important work that University of 
Southampton colleagues are doing on topics addressing food poverty alleviation, 
using Geospatial Science and open data.


Household food insecurity, or food poverty, is an ongoing challenge in the 
United Kingdom and in many countries. We would like to bring together all 
colleagues working in this area to learn and share ideas.

Universities in the UK are doing important research in this area. I am grateful 
to Vice- Chancellors of various UK universities and their representatives who 
have emailed me with details of the latest research in this topic being done at 
their universities.




In 2018, I was invited as lead speaker to address on the topic of  “Harnessing 
the digital potential to drive  higher education transformation in Africa” [1] 
at the  Sixth African Higher Education Week and the RUFORUM Biennial 
Conference<http://www.ruforum.org/Biennial2018/node/3> attended by Science and 
Education Ministers from many African countries, over  85 Vice Chancellors from 
universities across Africa as well as key scientists from across the world. 
This high level  meeting aimed to bring together key stakeholders to share 
ideas  for “Aligning African Universities to accelerate attainment of Africa’s 
Agenda 2063” [2][3] . The meetings were hosted by the Government of Kenya 
through the Ministry of Education. One of the key lessons I learned from the 
African Higher Education meetings was the important contributions that 
Universities in Africa and globally are making towards a hunger-free world.  I 
am grateful to all Vice-Chancellor colleagues for their work and leadership for 
Zero Hunger Aim.


GODAN will be establishing a new working group focussed on how open data can 
help address Food Poverty issues globally (more details will be send soon) and 
we invite  experts from all universities, governments, private sector to join 
the WG and contribute ideas.


Through this new GODAN Working Group to address topics on Food Poverty, we aim 
to bring together experts from  governments, universities, private sector from 
across the world on a common platform to work together  and contribute ideas. I 
am looking forward for your support and participation in this WG. We want to 
build this platform for joining ideas for our collective mission to end hunger 
and poverty, both locally and globally.



I am grateful to everyone, everywhere working for Zero Hunger Aim.


Best wishes,


Suchith




[1] 
https://www.osgeo.org/foundation-news/harnessing-the-digital-potential-to-drive-higher-education-transformation-in-africa/


[2] http://www.ruforum.org/Biennial2018/


[3] http://www.ruforum.org/Biennial2018/node/3


________________________________
From: Suchith Anand <eza...@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk>
Sent: 28 January 2021 08:11
To: discuss@lists.osgeo.org <discuss@lists.osgeo.org>; GeoForAll 
<geofor...@lists.osgeo.org>
Subject: Re: UK Food Poverty: Measurement and risk mitigation


Dear colleagues,


Please join tomorrow’s (29th Jan 2021) GODAN webinar and discussions on UK Food 
Poverty: Measurement and risk mitigation. Details at  
https://www.godan.info/events/uk-food-poverty-measurement-and-risk-mitigation



Through this webinar series, we want to share research outputs and examples of 
work done in this theme at various UK universities.  University of 
Southampton’s research is a good example of how geospatial science and open 
data can help in developing measures to alleviate food poverty in the UK.  We 
would like to bring together all  universities working in theme to share 
examples of their research projects, publications etc so we all can learn from 
each other and work together to alleviate food poverty in the UK and everywhere.


The pain of hunger is the same for the hungry everywhere (in the developed 
economies or developing economies). We cannot ignore food poverty issues faced 
by economically poor families globally. We need to find solutions to alleviate 
food poverty everywhere.


I am grateful to everyone, everywhere working for Zero Hunger Aim.


Best wishes,


Suchith


________________________________
From: Suchith Anand <eza...@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk>
Sent: 23 January 2021 07:57
To: discuss@lists.osgeo.org <discuss@lists.osgeo.org>; GeoForAll 
<geofor...@lists.osgeo.org>
Subject: UK Food Poverty: Measurement and risk mitigation




Dear colleagues,


I would like to invite you to GODAN Webinar covering UK Food Poverty and 
insecurity on 29th January 2021. Hidden hunger is a growing issue in developed 
economies.


Household food insecurity, or food poverty, is an ongoing challenge in the 
United Kingdom. There has been no systematic measurement of this growing public 
health and social justice problem until recently, with much data yet to be 
released. When the data are shared in early 2021, it will be at coarse 
geographic scales that will not allow for local planning of activities to 
address food poverty.


To address this knowledge gap, a team of researchers and experts at the 
University of Southampton have been developing a series of tools and projects 
to facilitate mapping and sharing of spatial open data, aimed at better 
informing local government and third sector/civil society.


The team are responsible for initiatives such as mylocalmap, a publishing 
platform for food poverty risk measures, devised in collaboration with 
Southampton City Council and agricultural policy advocates Sustain; and 
CITISCAPE, a citizen science based project enabling direct feedback between 
young adults and the City Council regarding their local built environment.


The webinar will be presented by Dr Dianna Smith (University of Southampton). 
Dianna is a lecturer in GIS and health geography, with over 15 years of 
experience in health inequalities and food insecurity research. She developed a 
model of food poverty risk used nationally in local government and contributes 
to Joint Strategic Needs Assessments (JSNAs) on food insecurity across many UK 
local authorities, guiding data collection and analysis.


More details  at 
https://www.godan.info/events/uk-food-poverty-measurement-and-risk-mitigation



I  would also like to take this opportunity to thank GeoData Institute and 
School of Geography & Environmental Science at University of Southampton for 
their help to GeoForAll initiative many years back.  It was University of 
Southampton who kindly developed and hosted the initial GeoForAll website for 
free and established the Open Source Geospatial Lab at Southampton 
http://www.osgl.soton.ac.uk/researchers


I will always be grateful for the support that University of Southampton 
colleagues kindly provided for the start of GeoForAll initiative many years 
back.



I am grateful to everyone, everywhere working for Zero Hunger Aim.


Best wishes,


Suchith



Dr Suchith Anand

Chief Scientist

Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition

https://www.godan.info

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Suchith_Anand






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