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  2. Hunger marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunger_marketing

    Hunger marketing is a marketing strategy that targets the emotions of human beings. The essence of hunger marketing is artificially low price and/or restricted supply

  3. World Food Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Food_Day

    An image produced as part of the World Food Programme's social media campaign for World Food Day in 2015.. World Food Day is an international day celebrated every year worldwide on October 16 to commemorate the date of the founding of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in 1945.

  4. Food security - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_security

    The 2021 edition of the SOFI report estimated the hunger excess linked to the COVID-19 pandemic at 30 million people by the end of the decade [5] – FAO had earlier warned that even without the pandemic, the world was off track to achieve Zero Hunger or Goal 2 of the Sustainable Development Goals – it further found that already in the first ...

  5. Hunger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunger

    In the field of hunger relief, the term hunger is used in a sense that goes beyond the common desire for food that all humans experience, also known as an appetite. The most extreme form of hunger, when malnutrition is widespread, and when people have started dying of starvation through lack of access to sufficient, nutritious food, leads to a ...

  6. Food drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_drive

    Many people involved in charity work are critical of the inefficiency of food drives. Emergency food providers are able to buy surplus stock from the food industry at a significant discount, Katherina Rosqueta of the Center for High Impact Philanthropy estimating it at 5% of retail price.

  7. Human food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_food

    Human food is food which is fit for human consumption, and which humans willingly eat.Food is a basic necessity of life, and humans typically seek food out as an instinctual response to hunger; however, not all things that are edible constitute as human food.

  8. Results (organization) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Results_(organization)

    RESULTS is a US non-partisan citizens' advocacy organization founded in 1980.. The organization aims to find long-term solutions to poverty by focusing on its root causes. It lobbies public officials, does research, and works with the media and the public to fight hunger and poverty.

  9. Emotional eating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_eating

    Emotional eating, also known as stress eating and emotional overeating, [1] is defined as the "propensity to eat in response to positive and negative emotions". [2] While the term commonly refers to eating as a means of coping with negative emotions, it sometimes includes eating for positive emotions, such as overeating when celebrating an event or to enhance an already good mood.