publication / Abril 12, 2024
Child Protection Minimum Requirements - Implementation Case Study: Nepal
CPMR, Nepal, Case Study
publication / Abril 12, 2024
Child Protection Minimum Requirements - Implementation Case Study: Cambodia
CPMR, Case Study, Cambodia
article / Maio 3, 2024
The Rights of the Child in Mozambique: ONE VIOLATION EVERY TWO HOURS
Child HelpLine is a non-profit organization and a World Vision Mozambique partner whose mission is to respond to the needs of children in need of protection. Through the line, a great deal of data is collected during calls and used as a source of information for planning reactive and proactive actions to defend and promote rights at the local, district, provincial, and national levels. Here at this article World Vision warns of the violations against children and calls for additional support to strengthen the contribution of the line for Child
publication / Abril 22, 2024
NextGen Aid: Technical Appendix
Technical Appendix for the NextGen Aid project, an economic appraisal to estimate the return on investment (ROI) from child-related Official Development Assistance (ODA).
publication / Abril 12, 2024
Child Protection Minimum Requirements - Implementation Case Study: Burundi
CPMR, Case Study, Burundi
publication / Abril 5, 2024
Full Case Study on Child Protection Minimum Requirements: Learnings from World Vision Burundi, Cambodia & Nepal
Explore World Vision's transformative journey with Child Protection Minimum Requirements (CPMRs), showcasing community-led interventions, reporting mechanisms, and adolescent empowerment in Cambodia, Nepal, and Burundi.
article / Abril 7, 2024
Another preventable case
Selma* was losing her health to malnutrition until World Vision Syria Response and its Partner Action for Humanity intervened with the much- needed support.
publication / Fevereiro 28, 2024
Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is Transforming Landscapes: A case study of Somaliland
Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is a low-cost land restoration technique used to combat poverty and hunger amongst subsistence farmers. It can reverse desertification, increase food, water and commodity production, and build resilience to climate extremes. It almost sounds too good to be true, but it is very real. The special ingredients are passing the knowledge to local communities, mobilising the message and transferring the skills in language they can understand, by people they can trust.