This article is part of a series to mark the World Food Programme (WFP) receiving the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize in Rome on 10 December. Click here to watch 'The People's Prize' event on Facebook
When you sit down to talk with a Syrian family, it's hard not to mention food.
Interviews and additional reporting by Alan Salman
Like many Yazidi families displaced and scattered in camps after having fled Isis, Khalid's family left their home in Sinjar when violence escalated in 2014.
The family first escaped into the Sinjar mountains, where they stayed for nine days with barely any food — he, his wife Naam, and their four daughters only narrowly survived.
Every year, WFP provides school meals and snacks to millions of children across the world. In 2018, children from 20 of the countries WFP operates in participated in WFP's annual Children's Design Competition.
In Cabo Delgado, in the north of Mozambique, a humanitarian crisis is unfolding that is receiving little global attention.
More than 2,000 people have reportedly been killed since October 2017 and the number of people driven from their homes has increased fourfold since February.
Conflict kicked off in 2017 when non-state armed groups attacked police stations in the town of Mocimboa da P
This morning, 10-year-old Agnes is rushing to school on the outskirts of Porto-Novo, Benin. She is taking steps towards reaching her dream of becoming a medical doctor.
Arafat pushes a wheelbarrow through the streets of Sanaa, back to the rented room he shares with his wife and four children. Formerly a warehouse worker in Hodeida, on the shores of the Red Sea, the 37-year-old fled to the capital when conflict engulfed the port city, causing him to lose his job.
Although he works odd jobs, his earnings are nowhere near enough for his family of six.
It's a chilly winter morning in June when I visit Oppah Kanongara at her home in Hopley, a chaotic suburb in the south-west of Harare, Zimbabwe's capital.