Briefing Papers Number 14, February 2012 | Page 3

2. Global Action and Coordination on Nutrition The 1,000 Days effort is intended to catalyze action on SUN in countries that express a commitment to scale up maternal and child nutrition—with the goal of achieving measurable results during the 1,000-day period September 2010 to June 2013. • The Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement builds on the momentum created by the series in The Lancet and the growing response to the global food price crisis. The SUN movement is a collaborative process that provides principles and direction for increased support for • Leadership at the country level: As of December 2011, countries as they scale up their efforts to tackle maternal 22 countries, including a majority of the 36 nations with and child undernutrition across a range of sectors and the highest rates of childhood stunting, had identified stakeholders (developing countries, donors and multithemselves as SUN countries.16 SUN countries have belateral institutions, civil society organizations, academic gun to develop individual national nutrition strategies institutions, and the private sector). The SUN movethat include nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive acment’s main role is to empower and support action at tion items. Each government has appointed a high-level country level by mobilizing resources, aligning efforts, representative to coordinate the implementation of the and supporting leadership and advocacy at the internastrategy across ministries. In addition, countries are estional level. The Scaling Up Nutrition Framework for Actablishing working groups to coordinate actions among tion, released in April 2010, has been endorsed by more key stakeholders, including representatives of the govthan 100 organizations. The SUN Framework13 helped ernment, donors, development banks, international establish a consensus on how best to ensure significant organizations, civil society, and business. Malawi and and sustained reductions in undernutrition during the Ghana have now launched formal SUN and 1,000 Days 1,000-day window. The Framework advocates both nuinitiatives. trition-sensitive and nutrition-specific interventions in addition to emphasizing the need for long-term advoca- 3. Political Will and Commitment to Prioritize cy and mobilization for action. The nutrition-sensitive Maternal and Child Nutrition in U.S. Foreign interventions seek to promote adequate nutrition as the Assistance Programs goal of national development policies in agriculture, Over the past three years, the U.S. government has profood security, social protection, health, education, rural vided high-level political support and pledged additional development, and emergency programs. Nutrition-specific interventions have nutrition improvement as their resources for nutrition. These efforts include using U.S. leadership to leverage resources from other donors, integrating primary goal. The Scaling Up Nutrition Roadmap, published in nutrition into other sectors, and confronting some of the key September 2010, makes the case that government lead- barriers to scaling up as needed to achieve the MDGs. In 2009, an early priority for the Obama administration ers and development partners should build political was responding to the significant rise in hunger caused by will and take action to improve nutrition. It also identifies inFigure 1 Building Country Scale-Up Platforms for Nutrition through vestments that have been shown Global Initiatives to work well when implemented UNICEF within the context of nutritionfocused development policies. GAFSP SUN encourages the participaU.S. Global tion of multi-sectoral stakeholdPEPFAR Health Initiative ers to rapidly scale up effective, evidence-based actions at the Dept. of State/USAID WHO – Opportunity Landscape Analysis on Countries’ country level.14 Readiness to Accelerate Action PMI Strengthenin