Attention Graph:

World Food Programme

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The World Food Programme's top 10 nearest neighbors contain no other food-focused or humanitarian-relief organizations by subcategory — instead, the cluster is dominated by fellow non-profits and global governance bodies, with the closest match being Human Rights Watch at 0.98.

The shape is flat: the top 10 span a narrow band from 0.98 down to 0.95, with no single entity pulling away from the pack. Tallying the subcategories across all 10 neighbors reveals a tight mix of Non-Profits — Human Rights Watch (0.98), UNICEF (0.97), UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency (0.97), Amnesty International USA (0.97), and Amnesty International (0.97) — alongside UN Human Rights (0.98, subcategory: Environmental) and the United Nations (0.98, subcategory: Government). The one outlier in the top 10 is Al Jazeera English at 0.96, the sole Marketing Channel in the group, classified as a TV Channel. The remaining two positions go to UNESCO (0.95, Non-Profit) and TIME (0.95, Magazine).

What this composition reveals is that WFP's audience is shaped almost entirely by the global civil-society and intergovernmental ecosystem — human rights bodies, UN agencies, and advocacy non-profits — rather than by news media or issue-specific relief organizations. The one media entry, Al Jazeera English, fits the same internationally oriented profile as the organizational neighbors.

This audience is defined by sustained engagement with the institutional architecture of global governance and human rights, not by any single cause or outlet.

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