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L’agence de notation Moody’s invite les pays de l’UE à concilier dépenses de défense et croissance

Euractiv.fr - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:15

La Commission incite les États membres à contracter de nouvelles dettes pour augmenter les dépenses de défense, ce qui rend les notations de crédit d'agences plus pertinentes que jamais.

The post L’agence de notation Moody’s invite les pays de l’UE à concilier dépenses de défense et croissance appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Beute verliert brutal an Wert: Hat sich der Louvre-Coup überhaupt gelohnt?

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:09
Ein ehemaliger Juwelendieb schätzt, dass die beim Louvre-Raub erbeuteten Juwelen den Tätern nur wenige Millionen einbringen werden. Laut David Desclos müssen die Schmuckstücke zerlegt werden, was ihren Wert drastisch reduziert.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Food Systems Are the Missing Link in Social Development

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:06

Crops growing at farmers’ cooperative, Baidoa, Southwest State, Somalia. Credit: FAO / Arete / Mahad Saed Dirie

By George Conway and Stefanos Fotiou
MOGADISHU / ROME, Oct 31 2025 (IPS)

Food has always been political. It decides whether families thrive or fall into poverty, whether young people see a future of opportunity or despair, whether communities feel included or pushed aside. Food is also a basic human right – one recognized in international law but too often unrealized in practice. Guaranteeing that right requires viewing food not as a form of emergency relief, but as the cornerstone of sustainable social development.

Despite this, food systems rarely feature in discussions of social policy, even though they underpin the same goals world leaders will take up at the World Social Summit in Doha this November: eradicating poverty, securing decent work, and advancing inclusion.

 

Food as social infrastructure

Food is often treated as a humanitarian issue, a matter for relief in times of drought or war. But look closer, and it is the ultimate social policy.

Food systems mirror our societies – where women bear the greatest burden of unpaid work, where child labour denies children education, and where Indigenous and marginalized communities are excluded

Food systems sustain half the world’s population – around 3.8 billion people – through farming, processing, transport, and retail, most of it informal and rural. They determine how families spend their income, who can afford a healthy diet, who learns and thrives in school, and who is left behind. Food systems mirror our societies – where women bear the greatest burden of unpaid work, where child labour denies children education, and where Indigenous and marginalized communities are excluded.

Seen through this lens, food is social infrastructure: the invisible system that underpins poverty reduction, livelihoods, and inclusion. When it functions, societies grow more equal and resilient. When it falters, inequality and exclusion deepen.

 

Pathways out of poverty

Across low-income countries, agriculture and food processing remain the single largest source of livelihoods. National food systems transformations are showing that targeted investments here can have outsized effects on poverty reduction.

In Rwanda, investment in farmer cooperatives and value chains has enabled smallholders to capture more of the value of their crops, lifting entire communities. In Brazil, school feeding programs that source from family farmers have created stable markets for the rural poor while improving child nutrition.

And in Somalia, the work of the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub with the Resident Coordinator’s Office and national partners is helping to strengthen pastoralist value chains and improve access to markets. By connecting local producers with regional buyers and embedding resilience into social protection systems, Somalia is charting a path out of chronic vulnerability toward sustainable livelihoods.

This approach combines food systems transformation with climate-smart social protection – linking producers and markets with safety nets that improve nutrition, boost inclusion, and attract investment. It is a model built on social and economic partnerships between government, civil society, and the UN, and is designed for lasting impact.

These examples highlight a simple truth: inclusive, resilient, and sustainable food systems can be among the most powerful anti-poverty tools available.

 

Work that is productive – and dignified

Food systems already employ one in three workers worldwide. But too many of these jobs are precarious, low-paid, and unsafe. The transformation now underway is beginning to change that.

Digital and market innovations are linking small producers to buyers directly, bypassing exploitative middlemen. Climate-resilient practices are reducing the boom-and-bust cycles that devastate rural incomes.

In Somalia, where livelihoods are often informal and climate shocks are frequent, strengthening food systems can expand opportunity and stability. By linking pastoralist value chains to markets and building skills for youth in food production and trade, food systems can turn subsistence into sustainable, resilient futures.

This shift matters: food systems can and must become a primary engine of decent, dignified employment in the global economy – particularly for women and youth.

 

Food as inclusion

Food is also identity and belonging. Policies that make nutritious diets affordable, protect Indigenous knowledge, and integrate marginalized producers into value chains are acts of social inclusion. In many countries, universal school meal programs have emerged as one of the most powerful equalizers. They reduce child hunger, keep girls in school, and support local farmers. A single meal can nourish, educate, and empower all at once.

Another powerful tool for inclusion, resilience, and sustainability are the social safety nets designed to enable smallholder producers to shift towards more nutrition-sensitive and climate-smart production. Thanks to support from the UN system – directed through the Food Systems Window of the Joint SDG Fund, jointly coordinated by the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub and the Fund Secretariat – Somalia is strengthening its delivery of basic social services by linking Early Warning Systems to the Unified Social Registry, and accompanying its cash transfers with livelihood graduation pathways involving microinsurance companies. This effectively transforms producers from beneficiaries into agents of change.

However, to be impactful, at scale, and long-lasting, food system interventions must be guided by strong political vision and coordinated through inclusive governance – bringing women, youth, and marginalized groups into decision-making. When communities most affected by policies help shape them, the results are more effective and more enduring.

In Somalia, the Council on Food, Climate Change, and Nutrition is taking shape thanks to the Joint SDG Fund Programme and the leadership of the Office of the Resident Coordinator, FAO, and WFP. Hosted under the Office of the Prime Minister and steered jointly by the OPM and the Ministry of Agriculture, the Council will bring together 11 ministries and oversee the implementation of the Somali National Pathway.

 

The case for Doha

Why does this matter for the World Social Summit? Because food systems provide a bridge across its three pillars. They are a direct lever for eradicating poverty, creating decent work, and advancing inclusion – in practice, not just in principle.

Yet food often remains on the margins of social policy. Ministries of labor and finance overlook it. Social protection debates focus on cash transfers and safety nets, rarely on food systems, markets, or rural cooperatives. The Doha Summit is the moment to change this.

Leaders should recognize food systems as core social infrastructure – as important as schools, hospitals, and roads. This means embedding food in national social policies, scaling financing for inclusive programs, and protecting food from the cycle of neglect that follows each crisis.

 

A new way of thinking

What if we reimagined the role of food in social policy? Instead of responding to food crises as humanitarian emergencies, we could invest in food systems as the foundation of long-term social development.

Progress should be measured not only by GDP or employment rates, but by whether every child eats a healthy meal each day, whether rural youth see farming as a path to prosperity, and whether no mother has to choose between buying medicine or buying bread – feeding her family today or tomorrow.

That is the lens the World Social Summit needs. Because poverty, unemployment, and exclusion are experienced daily through empty plates, insecure jobs, and the quiet despair of being shut out of opportunity.

 

The way forward

Food systems are already delivering – in farmers’ cooperatives, women- and youth-led businesses, and in national efforts like Somalia’s to link food transformation with social protection and employment. But they remain under-recognized in the social development agenda.

Doha offers the chance to correct that. If leaders are serious about eradicating poverty, creating decent work, and advancing inclusion, they should start with food. It is the system that connects households to hope, work to dignity, and communities to resilience.

 

George Conway, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, and Deputy Special Representative to the UN Secretary General, Somalia 

Stefanos Fotiou, Director of the Office of Sustainable Development Goals at the Food and Agriculture Organization, and Director of the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Alger célèbre la poésie chinoise : un concours inédit organisé par l’ambassade de Chine

Algérie 360 - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:04

Dans une atmosphère festive empreinte d’amitié et d’émotion, l’ambassade de Chine en Algérie a organisé, le jeudi 30 octobre 2025, la première édition du concours […]

L’article Alger célèbre la poésie chinoise : un concours inédit organisé par l’ambassade de Chine est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

AMENDMENTS 1 - 236 - Draft report Acceleration of permit-granting for defence readiness projects - PE778.323v01-00

AMENDMENTS 1 - 236 - Draft report Acceleration of permit-granting for defence readiness projects
Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection
Committee on Security and Defence
Lucia Yar, Henrik Dahl

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

New Yorks Grusel-Queen: So verkleidet sich Heidi Klum an Halloween

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:02
Sie ist die Queen of Halloween! Niemand feiert den Tag so wie Heidi Klum. Seit mehr als zwei Jahrzehnten verwandelt sich das Topmodel in dieser Nacht in extravagante Charaktere. Als was wird sich Heidi Klum dieses Jahr verkleiden? Wir haben eine Ahnung.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Checkliste für Hobbygärtner: 8 Dinge, die du jetzt im Garten tun musst

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 13:00
Es wird frisch, feucht und windig – der Garten spürt den nahenden Winter. Jetzt heisst es: anpacken, bevor der Frost Einzug hält. Denn neben den typischen Herbstarbeiten gibt es ein paar zusätzliche Aufgaben, mit denen Pflanzen gesund über die kalte Zeit kommen.

Az SaS csökkentené az államtitkárok számát

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:59
Az SaS az államtitkárok számának csökkentését javasolja a hatékonyság növelése és a spórolás érdekében. Szerintük ezáltal évente mintegy 1,5 millió eurót takaríthatna meg az állam.

EU cleantech sectors urge mandatory uptake rules for public and private buyers

Euractiv.com - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:55
Voluntary action won’t deliver real demand for EU-made green products, letter says
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Hogyan támogassuk a kutatókat a Horizont Európa 2026-2027. évi felhívásain való részvételben? Onboarding webinárium kutatásmenedzserek részére (2025. december 8.)

EU Pályázati Portál - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:52
Az NKFIH NCP csapata abban nyújt útmutatást kutatásmenedzserek részére, hogyan tudják támogatni intézményük kutatóit a pályázati rendszerben való eligazodásban, konzorciumi partnerkeresésben. A webináriumra elsősorban a Horizont Európa programban kezdő kutatásmenedzsereket várjuk.

Wegen stetig steigender Prämien: Bundesrat soll Löhne von Krankenkassen-Kadern deckeln

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:51
Für Chefs von Krankenkassen soll der Bundesrat künftig Höchstlöhne festlegen. Dieser Meinung sind die zuständigen Parlamentskommissionen. Zu einer entsprechenden Gesetzesvorlage können sich nun interessierte Kreise äussern.

So begründet YB die Trennung: Das sagen Spycher und Contini zum Trainerknall in Bern

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:48
Einen Tag nach dem 3:3 gegen GC trennt sich YB von Trainer Giorgio Contini. Dabei wurde dem Coach das grosse Auf und Ab in den letzten Wochen zum Verhängnis.

Italien: Ab Samstag gilt in Italien auf Skipisten Helmpflicht

Blick.ch - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:41
In Italien gilt ab Samstag auf Skipisten eine Helmpflicht. In der Schweiz ist hingegen keine Pflicht geplant.
Categories: European Union, Swiss News

Que va-t-il arriver à Sarah Ferguson et aux princesses maintenant qu'Andrew perd ses titres ?

BBC Afrique - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:40
Le langage utilisé dans la déclaration du palais de Buckingham est "très brutal", a déclaré l'historienne royale Kelly Swaby à la BBC.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Que va-t-il arriver à Sarah Ferguson et aux princesses maintenant qu'Andrew perd ses titres ?

BBC Afrique - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:40
Le langage utilisé dans la déclaration du palais de Buckingham est "très brutal", a déclaré l'historienne royale Kelly Swaby à la BBC.
Categories: Afrique

« J'ai vu des corps sans tête, des corps complètement défigurés » : le photographe qui a suivi pendant 24 heures l'opération policière qui a fait 121 morts à Rio

BBC Afrique - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:35
Le photographe Bruno Itan, qui a grandi dans le Complexe du Alemão, a suivi l'opération la plus meurtrière jamais enregistrée dans la région métropolitaine de Rio.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

« J'ai vu des corps sans tête, des corps complètement défigurés » : le photographe qui a suivi pendant 24 heures l'opération policière qui a fait 121 morts à Rio

BBC Afrique - Fri, 10/31/2025 - 12:35
Le photographe Bruno Itan, qui a grandi dans le Complexe du Alemão, a suivi l'opération la plus meurtrière jamais enregistrée dans la région métropolitaine de Rio.
Categories: Afrique

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