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Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, WhyHunger's Outreach and Partnerships Manager, is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the UN Rio +20 sustainable development conference and the concurrent Peoples' Summit. The negotiations of Rio +20 will help shape the future of our global environment and the lives of millions of people in poverty – though many of those who will be most impacted are
by Alison Cohen, Director of Programs Our caravan of jeeps – five in total, carrying 17 visitors including Hard Rock staff from around the world, members of the band Tonic, a professional photographer, and WhyHunger staff – pull up to Bazzin Zim School at the end of a dusty road crippled by potholes as is the norm in the rainy
Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, WhyHunger's Outreach and Partnerships Manager, is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the UN Rio +20 sustainable development conference and the concurrent Peoples' Summit. The negotiations of Rio +20 will help shape the future of our global environment and the lives of millions of people in poverty – though many of those who will be most impacted are
by Alison Cohen, Director of Programs Our caravan of jeeps – five in total, carrying 17 visitors including Hard Rock staff from around the world, members of the band Tonic, a professional photographer, and WhyHunger staff – pull up to Bazzin Zim School at the end of a dusty road crippled by potholes as is the norm in the rainy