Category Archives: Grassroots Network

Rob Green reports on the Nutrition Advocacy Day at Parliament

Last Tuesday, 14 grassroots volunteers headed to Parliament with our southern advocate- Walter Nyika- to speak with their MPS about global undernutrition ahead of the ‘Nutrition for Growth’ event on June 8th. This guest blog post about the day comes from Rob Green, the new group leader of our new RESULTS group in Cardiff.

2013-05-14 11.40.04It was my first time meeting the RESULTS team and my first time attending one of their Advocacy Days at Parliament.  The day began with a briefing from Walter Nyika, our honoured guest from Zimbabwe, who spoke to us about his work on permaculture and nutrition in Malawi.  After an inspiring talk, we headed to Parliament to meet with our MPS. My local MP of Cardiff South and Penarth is Stephen Doughty, a leader politician and former head of Oxfam Cyrmu.

After requesting to meet with Stephen at Parliaments central lobby, I was pleased to find out that he was available to meet with me. The meeting couldn’t have gone any better!  Stephen was extremely interested in the work RESULTS are doing and was keen to support their future campaigns. Within a minute he agreed to write the Rt. Hon Justine Greening, calling on her to commit at least 149 million per year, over multiple years, at the ‘Nutrition for Growth’ event to funding financially sound, national nutrition plans and by the end he wanted to give us a shout out in The Chamber. He also kindly agreed to speak at any future RESULTS events and was keen to help build the RESULTS group in Cardiff.

Other grassroots had similarly successful meetings. Reg Davis, leader of the Poole group, met with Robert Simms MP and Tom Maguire, leader of the central London group, met with Caroline Lucas MP, the former leader of the Green Party. Both MPs were extremely interested in the issue of global undernutrition and were keen to bring it to the attention of Justine Greening.

All in all, the advocacy day was an absolutely fantastic start to my time at RESULTS and I am now motivated to do more with the great team.

Gillian Price reports on the ‘IF’ campaign – Religious lobby of parliament 15 May 2013

Today’s blog comes from RESULTS volunteer Gillian Price; Gill is a long term member of our Stort Valley group. On Wednesday she attended a CAFOD organised lobby of Parliament to speak with MPs ahead of the June 8th Hunger Summit

IF – Religious lobby of parliament 15 May 2013

DSCF2464This event was billed in development circles as ‘The 500 nuns lobby’.  On the 15th May, 250 religious, priests and associates (Catholic and Anglican) gathered in Methodist Central Hall for a lively service and briefing from various ‘IF’ NGOs. Timothy Radcliffe gave an inspiring talk suggesting that, ‘Starvation is the exclusion of people from the common table of humanity’. There was amazing energy around as we picked up banners, writing the name of our group on the back, paused for a photo call and processed to Westminster.  Someone had had some ‘punning’ fun with the banners – including: ‘Hunger shouldn’t be a habit)!

The Daughters of the Cross (Gillian in green)

The Daughters of the Cross (Gillian in green)

81% of the 250 met with our MP or their office staff.  I and four Asian sisters met for 40 minutes with Charles Rowley, my MP’s Parliamentary Secretary. I pressed home the RESULTS ‘asks’ on undernutrition, the IF campaign asks on tax, transparency and nutrition and (at his request) gave him  an update on TB/miners including news of Mr Mkoko – I also sneaked in cheeky asks on committing to the global fund; enshrining 0.7% in law; disability and education, as well as thanking him profusely for commitments on polio vaccine, 0.7%; ‘the hunger summit’ and asked that the government deliver on its pledges. Charles promised that he would pass the information over to Mark Prisk and that they would tell us what they had done.  The sisters from Asia gave great practical stories of the effects of undernutrition from Pakistan, Nepal and India and I told him about how under-nutrition impacts on TB treatment in Cameroun, telling him of the nutrition programme we are using there along with the drug treatment. He was very interested in Walter Nyika’s story of how food availability in Zimbabwe has changed.  I gave Charles an IF wrist band and badge along with the briefing papers.

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Gillian and the group meet with Charles Rowley, parliamentary assistant to mark Prisk MP

All around Westminster hall there were groups of people gathered round their MPs pressing home their ‘asks’. Ed Miliband, Alan Duncan and Ivan Lewis gave short addresses and the place was a buzz of energy.  Back in Methodist central hall for the final liturgy Sarah Tether told us how motivating it is for her to have committed people like us coming along with strong asks. For many it was the first time lobbying, but afterwards people said how good it was and that they would definitely be lobbying again. It was strange lobbying without the RESULTS gang, and a very different, but positive experience being part of a large lobby – there were even chairs put out for us. We meet again for the IF rally on 8 June  with the strap line –

‘8 leaders.  8 June.  Our chance to stop 1 in 8 people going hungry’

As I live below the line I wonder: Has hunger’s time come?

I have just been talking with my colleague Tom about the content of this blog. We were discussing the tone that so many Live Below the Line blogs take and we felt that they followed something of a formula: a description of the challenge; trepidation at the thought of five days without enough food; first day blues; caffeine withdrawal; mid-week slump; frustration at a lack of food options; end of week morale boost; reflection on the challenge and comments on how the challenge has changed the participants life.

Potato Curry and Chappati

Potato Curry and Chappati

A formula indeed; one that Tom and I have both followed on blogs about the challenge. And there’s nothing wrong with a blog like that; but this is the fifth time I have done that challenge, and well, I’m getting pretty good at it. I don’t have the same feelings of tiredness, hunger and grumpiness……all in I’m just not finding it difficult. I am craving caffeine in the mornings but I’m living with that…..I mean humans evolved without drinking a flat white every day; anyway I have around 72 ‘tea’ bags that I bought from Sainsbury’s. It’s cheap but it does the job.

As a result, I have had a little bit more time to think clearly about the challenge and the campaign more broadly, and so I think I’ll share my thoughts on those.

As the total raised through Live Below the Line for the year pushes past the £650,000 mark and thousands of people converge around the IF campaign and its hunger and food related asks, I wonder, did the GPP have the foresight to know that this was an issue that’s time had come? Do they own a crystal ball into which they gaze of an evening?

To answer that question, I think, no, the GPP don’t have the power to see the future. I do however think that they have captured a moment by making hunger and food the central theme of their campaign. Leaving aside the catchiness of the campaign and the way it has started to permeate the public’s imagination, the issue at its heart, hunger and poverty are so central to everything we do that it seems inconceivable that while they have been at the core of everything we do, they have also somehow managed to slip off our radar. Allow me to elaborate.

Hunger was the issue which kick started the western rush to aid the Global South in response to the famines that swept Sub Saharan Africa in the 70’s and 80’s; and whilst they have long been seen as key indicators of progress and the focus of some campaigning, hunger and undernutrition have gradually slipped down the international agenda. In 2012 less than 0.3% of global aid assistance went directly on nutrition; as a result the number of undernourished people in developing countries has actually risen in absolute terms, climbing from 824 million in 1990 to 925 million in 2010. This despite the fact that ‘we have the means; we have the capacity to eliminate hunger from the face of the Earth in our lifetimes. We only need the will’ JFK, 1963

It was this fact that inspired Sam Daley-Harris to go on and found RESULTS in the USA in the USA1970s. This fact: we have the means, resources, infrastructure and understanding to eliminate hunger. It is up to us to generate the will to make it happen.

And that’s what we have to do and that, I think, is the strength of Live Below the Line and the IF Campaign….they represent that push, that clamouring of spirit that is needed to generate the will to end hunger. RESULTS believes in that vision and is firm in stating that we all posses the agency to call for change.

Whether David Cameron, Justine Greening and the rest hear that call is one thing, but to push them to exercise that will………..well, that’s something we can –and must- all do.

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Recording of May conference call now available

We are pleased to announce that a recording of the April conference call is now available for download.  On this month’s call we discussed the issue of childhood undernutrition and our upcoming campaigning on the issue. Over the next few weeks we are organising an advocacy tour and bringing a delegation of grassroots volunteers to London to campaign on the issue ahead of the G8 and the upcoming Nutrition for Growth being organised by the UK government.

Our guest on the call was Kat Pittore, RESULTS’s own nutrition advocacy officer. The call was a great opportunity to hear about the issue of undernutrition and the major campaigning opportunities we have over the coming month to make a big impact and turn the tables on hunger.

Click here for the call.

Advocacy day trip to an AIDS vaccine lab, as described one who was there

Today’s blog comes from Mark Pointer of our Norwich group, who joined us on out advocacy day trip to a working AIDS vaccine lab.

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Dr Bergin speaks to the group

On the last day of our National Conference, we spent a very enjoyable and informative morning at the Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, as we visited the prestigious Human Immunology Laboratory (HIL).

The HIL is the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative`s flagship laboratory where it performs its own AIDS vaccine research as well as coordinating research for other IAVI labs around the world. IAVI is a global, not-for-profit, public-private product-development partnership working with organizations in countries worldwide to help to develop an affordable AIDS vaccine through research and development, effective clinical trials, education initiatives, policy analysis and advocacy.

We were greeted by Dr Philip Bergin and Dr Emmanuel Cormier, who explained

Dr Bergin shows us the £250,000 multi-laser flow cytometer

Dr Bergin shows us the £250,000 multi-laser flow cytometer

their AIDS research work to date and how HIL serves as a hub for IAVI’s vaccine development partnerships. The HIL team, consisting of 18 research scientists and technicians play a pivotal role in AIDS vaccine development in low and middle income countries. Partners include the Kenya AIDS Vaccine Initiative, Rwanda’s Project San Francisco, the Uganda Virus Research Institute, the Indian Council of Medical Research and the Zambia–Emory HIV Research Project. In some countries where IAVI is not sponsoring clinical studies, the organization works with partners to support AIDS vaccine research and advocacy efforts

The HIL team also oversees the training in IAVI’s extended network of collaborating clinical research centres  With their support nearly all of the labs in this network have received international accreditation in Good Clinical Laboratory Practices (GCLP), ensuring the standardization of laboratory procedures applied in IAVI-sponsored vaccine trials.

Blood samples!

Blood samples!

Dr Bergin took us on a guided tour of the laboratory, explaining the research which was being carried out in different areas. He told us that one of the main problems of the development an AIDS vaccine is the ability of the HIV virus to mutate before immune system antibodies can neutralize the virus. Also, the cost of developing a vaccine became clear when we were told that just one of the pieces of equipment (multi-laser flow cytometer) cost £250,000!

The laboratory is the central Repository where all the specimens from HIV vaccine trials and epidemiology studies are stored and we were very impressed with the liquid nitrogen pods, in which tens of thousands of 1ml specimen tubes are stored either in -180 C in liquid nitrogen pods (Blood) or in– 80 C freezers (Serum).

During a Q & A session with Dr Bergin and Dr Cormier they explained that DFID is a major funder but IAVI has brought in other UK partners including Oxford University, St.George’s Hospital and Imperial College.

Vaccine research is a long-term and costly investment, but the potential rewards

Our handsome Mr Poitner inspects the samples

Our handsome Mr Poitner inspects the samplesare very much more cost effective compared to the price of continual antiretroviral treatment. Currently investment in AIDS vaccine research stands at £800 million compared to the cost of antiretroviral drugs being £22 billion. However, for every two people put on antiretroviral therapy five become newly infected with HIV.

IAVI’s current donors include the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Starr Foundation, the governments of Denmark, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, New York City, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Dr Cormier explained that IAVI helps to address the critical gaps in vaccine development by bringing together experience and expertise with ground breaking new early research from academia. In IAVI projected models, if a vaccine can be produced giving 70 % effectiveness against the AIDS virus, it would save 8.9 million lives.

Both doctors have been encouraged by results of a clinical trial in Thailand in 2009 and are hoping that the new development goals feature R & D. They are also hoping that the UK government will understand the value and benefits of a long-term investment into vaccine development.

The HIL is tucked away inside the Chelsea and Westminister Hospital. I work in an NHS laboratory and was not even aware of its existence. Yet, as we walked around the HIL and talked to Drs. Bergin and Cormier it was clear to us that it is carrying out ground breaking work. What a shame its work is not better known and made more visible to potential donors, policy decision makers and the general public. The UK should be very proud of the work these researchers are doing. Just listening to Dr Bergin and Dr Cormier, you can see how passionate and determined they are to maintain the important progress made in IAVI`s research in finding an AIDS vaccine. A vaccine would dramatically transform the lives of millions of people world-wide. It would also reduce the growing need for antiretroviral drugs by stopping AIDS infections taking hold. We sincerely hope that IAVI’s present donors continue to support them are that more donors will come on board to support this vital research.

May Action Announced

Despite the focus on hunger and poverty in the MDGs, under nutrition remains a problem of almost unimaginable proportions. In 2010 it was estimated that 925 million people in developing countries were suffering from some form of under nutrition- that’s up from 824 million in 1990.

Banner ImageThere are many causes of this problem: an unfair global food system that favours large scale industrial food production over small scale farming; significant gaps in international financing for agricultural production; large numbers of people eating not enough or not nutritionally rich enough food; fluctuating food prices that force millions of people into food poverty…..the list goes on.

However, the winds of change are starting to blow.

This June, the leaders of the G8 are meeting in the UK to discuss, among other things, the crisis at the heart of our food system. What’s more, on June 8th ahead of the G8 meeting, David Cameron is hosting a ‘Hunger Summit’ in London, to make a resounding international call for financial resources and political will to tackle under-nutrition.

Over the past few months, hundreds of UK charities have been working together as part of the ‘IF Campaign’ to make sure world leaders clearly hear the call to end world hunger.

This month we will be joining the global movement to end the crisis in our food system. We are calling on the UK Government and David Cameron to stand up and make a strong pledge at the Summit and to implement changes that will create a fair and sustainable food system for all.

Materials included this month:

GROUP MEETINGS FOR TELEPHONE CONFERENCE: 7th May 2013, 8pm

This month there are groups meeting to join the conference call in: Central London, South London, Poole, the Stort Valley, Birmingham, Oxford, Macclesfield, Central Sheffield, South Sheffield, Leicester, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Norwich, Bath, Bristol, Leamington Spa, Reading and Linlithgow.  If you would like information on the location of your local group, please get in touch with us in the office at: felix.jakens@results.org.uk

If yo would like to join the conference call there are 3 numbers you can call –  0844 762 0762, 0203 398 1398 or 0800 22 90 900. You must then enter the participant code, which is 18723. If you would like advice about which number to call please contact us in the office.

We look forward to you joining us

Groundbreaking Hunger and Nutrition Commitment Index will Improve Accountability

Today the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) released a new report called the Global Hunger and Nutrition Commitment Index which is the first index to look at government commitment to tackling hunger and nutrition, specifically looking at policies, legal frameworks and public spending on hunger and nutrition. The report examines both hunger, or not having enough food and undernutrition, or not having enough nutrients to be healthy, separately. It looks at interventions  such as provision of food rations, which alleviate hunger but do little to tackle underlying factors contributing to undernutrition, separately from nutrition interventions. It also examines nutrition interventions, which include policies to improve public health, sanitation, infant and young child care practices which reduce chronic undernutrition, which is caused by a complex interaction of disease and poor food availability.

The report looks at 45 countries, and found that sustained economic growth does not lead to an automatic interest in reducing hunger and nutrition. The report specifically examines 22 indicators of political commitment to reduce undernutrition and ranked the countries based in their commitment. The report found that countries with high levels of economic growth such as India and Nigeria have not chosen prioritized reducing hunger and under-nutrition where as low income countries, such as Malawi and Madagascar have high levels of political commitment to reducing hunger and under-nutrition.

This report is particularly interesting because of its goal to increase accountability and transparency, allowing for grassroots advocacy by citizens of each country, making it easy for individuals in the global south to see what their government has promised and how it compares to what other countries governments’ have promise.  The hope is that this report can be used by individuals and organizations to hold their governments to account and demand for better policies to tackle hunger and malnutrition.

If you want to learn more the final report can be found here

Recording of the April conference call now available for download

We are pleased to annouce that a recording of the April conference call is now available for download. On this months call we discussed our forthcoming fundraiser ‘Live Below the Line’ and our new work on nutrition, that the money from this years fundraiser will go to support.

This months guest speaker was Aaron Oxley, Executive Director at RESULTS UK.

The call was a great launch of our April Action and a great opportunity to get up to speed on nutrition as we begin to campaign more on the issue over the coming months. Click here to download the recording.

Dying For Gold tour updates from Warwick, Birmingham, Glasgow and Southampton

In the last 5 days we have ventured to the Midlands for screenings in Warwick and Birmingham, back to Scotland for the Medcin Global Health Conference and then back down to the South of England for a screening in Southampton last night! Tonight we are in Bristol,tommorrow in Poole, then back to London for the screening at the Ritzy Cinema on Wednesday night and the LSHTM event on the Friday evening.

Have a read below to see what we have been up to and remember to sign the petition, calling on Anglo Gold Ashanti to PREVENT, FIND and TREAT TB in their minees, if you havnt already.

Day 7: Warwick

We spent the majority of the morning working away in the dining room of our cozy Cambridge lodge. After lunch we headed for the university bubble of Warwick where we teamed up with student hub’s members Jo and Harshil. Whilst Saoirse and the student hub’s team flyered for the evening’s screenings Felix and Jonathan set up camp in the library cafe to work on their respective presentations for Medsin’s Global Health Conference on Thursday.

As it was the last day of term the evening’s screening was an intimate affair but the audience were engaged and asked lots of interesting questions. We discussed the BCG vaccine- its ineffectiveness in treating TB of the lungs and the progress in developing new vaccines. We also talked about the economic case for the mining companies to implement best practices for dealing with TB in the mines. The World Bank are currently doing a cost-benefit analysis of this situation and have estimated that the mining industry is losing out on around $783 million dollars in terms of treatment for miners who have contracted silicosis and TB; training up new workers to replace those who have become too ill to work; and the money lost in wages to those retrenched miners.

Staying in Birmingham tonight with Felix’s old chum.

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National Conference Speakers Annouced!

We are pleased to announcethree of the speakers who will be joining us for our annual National Conference over the weekend of the 20th-22nd April, 2013.

With a diverse range of speakers already confirmed, including speakers from the global south, this year’s conference is shaping up to be one of our most exciting conferences to date!  To find out more about them, have a read of their bios below.

Mahesh Chandrasekar

Mahesh Chandrasekar is the International Policy and Campaigns Manager at Leonard Cheshire, a non-for-profit organisation working to protect the rights of disabled people across the world. Drawing on his experiences working in the slums of Bangalore, Mahesh will speak at the session ‘Failing the Final Fifth: the impact on inequality on reaching the MDGs’ about the marginalisation of people living with disabilities in India and its  impact on the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.  Mahesh will be joined by three other speakers, including Mark Lattimer (see below) and a TBC speaker who will discuss gender.

Puspanath Krishnamurthy is a Senior Associate at the Centre for Social Markets (CSM), a not-for-profit organisation working to promote entrepreneurship in India and south Asia. Before joining CSM, Push has spent much of his professional career at Oxfam, where he worked on campaigns such as Make Trade Fair, the Climate Change Hearings and HIV/AIDS. An accomplished communicator and storyteller, Push takes complex issues and popularizes them for grassroots constituencies using a blend of traditional advocacy and new approaches. To see Push in action click here.

Drawing on first-hand experience campaigning in India, Pushpanath will be joining us to discuss how the MDGs have influenced the development of civil society and empowered people’s movements particularly in the global south to campaign and lobby governments and decision-makers on development issues.

John Hillary

John Hillary is the Executive Director of War on Want, a not-for-profit organisation working to fight poverty in developing countries in partnership with people affected by globalisation.  John has worked for the past 20 years in the international development and human rights sector, and is a recognised expert in many fields across the global justice agenda. He has published widely on issues of international politics and globalisation, trade and investment, privatisation, conflict, aid conditionality, Palestine and Iraq, and became one of the first external columnists for the Guardian. A passionate and outspoken speaker, John regularly challenges governments and big businesses on global justice issues. John will be joining us as a panellist on the session ‘Post 2015: What should replace the Millennium Development Goal’ to share his thoughts on the world after 2015.

For more information about the conference take a look at the National Conference website or click here to download a booking form.