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Call for Expression of Interest: Strengthening Children’s Food Environments in Kenya

Nominations open for Arrell Global Food Innovation Award 2025

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Deadline: 12-Jun-2026

The United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) Kenya is seeking partners to support evidence generation, policy dialogue, and advocacy to improve healthy food environments and strengthen regulatory frameworks for commercially processed complementary foods (CPCFs) for children in Kenya.

The programme focuses on improving child nutrition outcomes by addressing food quality, safety, labelling standards, and marketing practices related to commercially produced foods for infants and young children aged 6–36 months.

Overview

This initiative aims to strengthen evidence-informed policy and regulatory systems governing child food environments in Kenya. It responds to increasing reliance on commercially processed complementary foods due to urbanisation, caregiver time constraints, and rising food costs.

While CPCFs can contribute to dietary adequacy, product quality varies significantly, with concerns around high sugar, salt, and unhealthy fat content, as well as inconsistent labelling and marketing practices.

Programme Objectives

The assignment aims to:

Key Thematic Areas

The programme focuses on:

Context and Rationale

UNICEF Kenya highlights several structural challenges affecting child nutrition:

Existing frameworks such as the Kenya Breast Milk Substitutes Act provide partial protection but do not fully regulate the composition and quality standards of CPCFs.

Programme Scope

The selected partner will undertake:

Evidence Generation and Research

Legal and Policy Review

Stakeholder Engagement

Advocacy and Policy Dialogue

Youth Engagement

Expected Outputs

The assignment will deliver:

Indicative Budget

How to Apply

Step 1: Confirm Eligibility

Applicants must:

Step 2: Develop Technical Proposal

Include:

Step 3: Outline Implementation Plan

Provide:

Step 4: Submit Application

Submit the full proposal in line with UNICEF requirements, including technical and financial components.

Tips for Applicants

Why This Programme Matters

Child nutrition is increasingly influenced by commercial food environments. In Kenya, rising reliance on processed complementary foods has created both opportunities and risks for infant and young child nutrition. This programme strengthens evidence-based policymaking to ensure safer, healthier, and more transparent food systems that support optimal child development and reduce long-term health risks.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Conclusion

The UNICEF Kenya initiative strengthens evidence-based governance of child food environments by addressing gaps in the regulation of commercially processed complementary foods. Through research, policy dialogue, and youth engagement, the programme aims to improve food quality standards, promote healthier diets for young children, and support stronger nutrition policy frameworks in Kenya.

For more information, visit UN Partner Portal.

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