A Global Agricultural Research Partnership

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)

Food is a basic human right. Evidence-based policies and strategies help ensure that all people have access to safe, sufficient, nutritious, and sustainably grown food so they can lead healthy and productive lives. Food policy research generates the evidence.

Established in 1975, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) identifies and analyzes national and international policies and strategies for meeting the food needs of the developing world on a sustainable basis, with particular emphasis on low-income countries and on the poorer groups in those countries.

While the research effort is geared to the precise objective of contributing to the reduction of hunger and malnutrition, the factors involved are many and wide-ranging, requiring analysis of underlying processes and extending beyond a narrowly defined food sector.

The Institute’s research program reflects worldwide collaboration with governments, as well as private and public institutions, interested in increasing food production and improving the equity of its distribution. Research results are disseminated to policymakers, opinion formers, administrators, policy analysts, researchers, and others concerned with national and international food and agricultural policy.

Contacts

Address of headquarters:

International Food Policy Research Institute
2033 K St, NW
Washington, DC 20006-1002 USA

General contact information:

Phone: +1-202-862-5600
Fax: +1 202-467-4439
E-mail: ifpriATcgiar.org

Media inquiry contact:

+1 (202) 862-5679
s.immenschuhATcgiar.org

News

Tackling Malnutrition in India

This blog story by IFPRI Senior Research Fellow Purnima Menon and Micronutrient Initiative President Venkatesh Mannar was originally posted on The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Impatient Optimists blog.

Not a Free Ride

Collective action in agriculture can take many forms, from contract farming to producer marketing groups. Smallholders often rely on these groups to increase their access to markets and get higher prices for their goods.

Press Releases

Feeding Nine Billion in 2050

April 11, 2013—During the next 40 years the world’s population is projected to reach more than nine billion people. Demand for food is expected to increase by 60 percent under business-as-usual assumptions. Competition for land, water, and food cou…

Publications

Project News

AGRODEP Announces 2013 Grant for Gaps in Research

The African Growth and Development Policy (AGRODEP) Modeling Consortium recently issued its second annual call for “Gaps in Research” Grants. These grants support research on emerging issues in Africa that have previously received little or…

Slides

Press Clippings

Videos

Podcasts