Deadline: 19-Dec-2025
The World Food Programme (WFP) is launching an initiative to strengthen food security and nutrition in Unity State, South Sudan. The programme combines general food distribution, malnutrition prevention, and early recovery assistance to stabilize vulnerable households and build long-term community resilience. These interventions address conflict-related displacement, climate shocks, and chronic food insecurity.
WFP is supporting vulnerable communities across Unity State through integrated food assistance, nutrition programming, and early recovery activities. The initiative aims to address immediate hunger while laying the groundwork for resilience, stability, and improved nutritional outcomes.
Core Objectives
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Prevent hunger and stabilize vulnerable households
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Reduce malnutrition among children and at-risk groups
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Strengthen community systems for transparency and accountability
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Support early recovery and long-term resilience
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Address the impacts of conflict, displacement, and climate shocks
Three Pillars of the Initiative
1. General Food Distribution (GFD)
This component provides life-saving food support through a structured and transparent process.
Key Activities
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Community engagement before, during, and after distributions
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Mobilization and sensitization with local leaders
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Commodity management, including requests, receipts and distribution
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Monitoring to ensure households receive correct rations
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Strengthening Project Management Committees (PMCs)
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Operating help desks to collect community feedback
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Maintaining accountability mechanisms throughout all stages
Why It Matters
GFD ensures food access in areas affected by conflict and displacement, stabilizing household consumption and reducing hunger-related vulnerability.
2. Nutrition Support (Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme – BSFP)
This pillar integrates targeted malnutrition prevention with broader food assistance.
Key Activities
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Preventing malnutrition among young children and vulnerable groups
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Delivering assistance through in-kind and cash-based transfers
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Beneficiary identification through community participation
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Market assessments to guide modality choices
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Nutritional education on diet, feeding practices, and behaviour change
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Continuous monitoring and reporting for programme improvement
Why It Matters
BSFP reduces the risk of acute malnutrition, improves dietary diversity, and supports the health of children and vulnerable households.
3. Early Recovery Assistance (ERA)
This component supports communities in rebuilding resilience beyond emergency aid.
Key Activities
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Community-driven resilience activities
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Capacity building for local food production
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Peacebuilding efforts in conflict-affected zones
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Flood-risk management in high-exposure areas
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Ensuring support for households with limited labour capacity
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Selecting model payams for concentrated early recovery interventions
Why It Matters
ERA shifts communities from dependency on emergency food assistance toward sustainable recovery, improved livelihoods, and long-term stability.
Who Is Eligible?
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Humanitarian and development organizations with relevant field experience
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NGOs with capacity to manage commodity distribution and nutrition programming
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Partners able to deploy staff and operate in Unity State
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Entities with proven systems for monitoring, reporting, and community engagement
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Organizations committed to accountability, transparency, and conflict-sensitive approaches
How the Initiative Works
1. Community Engagement
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Conduct meetings with chiefs, elders, women’s groups, and youth
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Sensitize communities about distribution processes
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Support PMCs and feedback mechanisms
2. Programme Implementation
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Manage food distribution cycles
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Implement BSFP activities
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Facilitate early recovery projects in selected payams
3. Monitoring and Accountability
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Track commodity flows
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Collect community feedback through help desks
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Ensure transparent reporting and documentation
4. Adaptation and Continuous Learning
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Adjust approaches based on needs and seasonality
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Integrate community feedback into programme design
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Coordinate with local authorities and cluster partners
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Weak engagement with local leadership
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Poor documentation during commodity handling
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Neglecting feedback mechanisms or help desks
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Failing to adjust interventions based on monitoring data
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Overlooking households with limited labour capacity in early recovery activities
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. What areas of Unity State does the initiative cover?
The programme targets multiple payams across Unity State, prioritizing communities affected by conflict, displacement, and food insecurity.
2. What is the role of implementing partners?
Partners manage commodity distributions, support nutrition activities, engage communities, operate feedback systems, and deliver early recovery interventions.
3. What is included in the nutrition component?
The BSFP provides in-kind or cash-based nutritional support, education on malnutrition prevention, and continuous monitoring.
4. How does WFP ensure accountability?
Through PMCs, help desks, community meetings, commodity tracking, and monitoring systems that verify correct ration delivery.
5. How does early recovery differ from emergency assistance?
Emergency assistance focuses on immediate food needs, while early recovery builds skills, supports local production, enhances peacebuilding, and strengthens resilience.
6. Why are cash-based transfers sometimes used?
Where markets are functional, cash transfers offer flexibility, support local economies, and improve dietary diversity.
7. How does the programme support households with limited labour?
By designing inclusive assistance strategies and ensuring these households benefit from resilience activities even when they cannot participate physically.
Conclusion
WFP’s integrated food security and nutrition initiative in Unity State combines life-saving support with long-term resilience building. Through general food distribution, malnutrition prevention, and early recovery, the programme strengthens vulnerable households, supports stability, and creates the foundations for future livelihood and resilience programming across South Sudan’s Unity State.
For more information, visit UN Partner Portal.









































