publication / Maj 3, 2013
WV JWG Annual Review 2012
See what's been going on in WV JWG, read about our work and learn more about our personal stories of success!
publication / Januar 19, 2017
Rapport Annuel 2016
Chaque année, World Vision Sénégal publie son rapport annuel d’activités, un condensé de sa contribution pour améliorer le bien-être des enfants.
publication / April 4, 2017
Narrative Report - StartFund , 2016.
Like the rest of Southern Africa, Zambia was impacted by the recent El Nino event which resulted in late start to the 2015/2016 rain season and prolonged dry spells.
publication / Januar 8, 2015
Development Assets Profile (DAP)
World Vision has selected the Developmental Assets Profile (DAP) as the recommended tool to measure the World Vision child well-being target ‘children report an increase in level of wellbeing’.The DAP was selected because it is an effective and cost-efficient DME tool for use with children ages 1
publication / Juni 19, 2014
Social Investment Latin America World Vision
This report studies the ways that the private sector engages in social investment, specifically in Latin America. This study surveyed companies based in Latin America to determine where they have or where they wish to invest their resources for social causes.
publication / Juli 20, 2016
Understanding handpump sustainability: Determinants of rural water source functionality in the Greater Afram Plainsregion of Ghana
Safe drinking water is critical to human health and development. In rural sub-Saharan Africa, most improved water sources are boreholes with handpumps; studies suggest that up to one third of these handpumps are nonfunctional at any given time.
article / Decembar 1, 2016
Part of Me
Bump, bump goes the SUV, tossing its passengers up and down, as we meander through dusky and unlevelled motorways. Half-lit concrete structures, silhouetted by beams of dawn sunlight, give way to vast expanses of partially barren hills.
publication / April 5, 2016
HIV Prevention in Key Populations
Key populations are defined by the World Health Organization as “groups who, due to specific higher-risk behaviours, are at increased risk of HIV irrespective of the epidemic type or local context”.