publication / Junho 14, 2023
Invisible and Forgotten: Displaced children hungrier and at more risk than ever
The number of child refugees has more than doubled since 2005; on top of their increased vulnerability, they are facing hunger and malnourishment as well as complex situations that put their safety at risk. Many forcibly displaced children live in areas often overlooked by the international community and aid resources due to global priorities. Girls and boys are not responsible for conflicts, climate change, or responses to global pandemics, nor do they bear any responsibility for food supply shortages or hyperinflation, yet these issues continue to disproportionately affect their well-being and jeopardise their access to the education critical to helping pull them out of the vicious cycle of poverty and hunger.
article / Agosto 29, 2023
No more hiding: It’s going to be a happy ending for siblings born with clubfoot in South Sudan
Give children a chance to live a better life, no matter what. World Vision stands by this call. This means being ready to go the extra mile to ensure children are cared for, protected, nourished, and educated adequately. And this means helping children like 12-year-old Nyaluak, 3-year-old Akon, and 16-year-old Aguen, reach their full potentials and achieve their dreams by addressing obstacles that can hinder them from achieving these. Here is their story.
publication / Abril 23, 2024
Putting Children First for Sustainable Development
New research to analyize the economic beneift of Official Development Assistance (ODA) programming that directly or indirectly targets children found that every $1USD of child-related ODA directly or indirectly results in a $10USD return and highlights that investing in children is a way to maximise the benefit that donors see from their ODA programmes.
article / Agosto 22, 2023
Enid Ocaya: Bringing leadership lessons from refugee response in Uganda and South Sudan to the Ukraine crisis
I joined World Vision Uganda in 2012 as a Disaster Risk Reduction Manager with Humanitarian Emergency Affairs (HEA) duties. Uganda was coming out of a war of 20 years waged by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in Northern Uganda and that part of the country was ready for recovery programming.
publication / Junho 26, 2023
Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCRAMER) SitRep #6
To address life-saving needs of those impacted by the violence, World Vision initiated the Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCAMER) aimed at meeting live-saving needs for children and their families in Sudan as well as neighbouring countries of Ethiopia, Central African Republic, Chad and South Sudan.
publication / Junho 26, 2023
Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCRAMER) SitRep #5
To address life-saving needs of those impacted by the violence, World Vision initiated the Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCAMER) aimed at meeting live-saving needs for children and their families in Sudan as well as neighbouring countries of Ethiopia, Central African Republic, Chad and South Sudan.
publication / Junho 26, 2023
Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCRAMER) SitRep #4
To address life-saving needs of those impacted by the violence, World Vision initiated the Sudan Crisis and Migration Emergency Response (SCAMER) aimed at meeting live-saving needs for children and their families in Sudan as well as neighbouring countries of Ethiopia, Central African Republic, Chad and South Sudan.
publication / Agosto 7, 2022
Meeting the unique humanitarian needs: An integrated response in South Sudan's Warrap State
In South Sudan's Warrap State, two-thirds (62.9%) of the area's population are facing acute levels of food insecurity, reports a 2022 food insecurity warning system.
publication / Outubro 19, 2022
South Sudan WASH Capacity Statement
South Sudan WASH Capacity Statement
video / Abril 3, 2024
DR Congo: World Vision responds to the growing needs of IDPs exacerbated by the humanitarian crisis in Eastern
This video is a compilation of testimonies from internally displaced people in the Kashaka camp in eastern DRC. These internally displaced people (IDPs) talk about their lives since they left their villages to flee the war, the difficulties they have encountered and how they are facing new difficulties in the camps where they live. Life has become very difficult and humanitarian aid is unable to meet their needs, which have increased as a result of the escalating violence. World Vision continues to respond with the support of partners, but at the same time is calling for more resources.