publication / April 24, 2024
World Vision Burkina Faso : Rapport Annuel FY23
D'octobre 2022 à septembre 2023, la programmation de World Vision Burkina a touché plus de 179 000 personnes et impacté plus de 104 000 enfants dans différents secteurs. Lire plus :
article / March 11, 2024
Water to Wealth: A family’s garden turned into income stream
Once facing hardships due to poverty, the Dlamini family’s lives took a positive turn when access to water became available in their community. With this newfound resource, the family embarked on a journey to create a garden at their home, a dream previously deemed unattainable.
press release / April 24, 2024
World Vision Launches "ENOUGH" Campaign to End Child Hunger and Malnutrition in Kenya
World Vision launches ENOUGH campaign in Kenya to address child hunger and malnutrition in the country. The landmark campaign is a timely initiative that will not only call for enough nutritious food in school and at home, but will also call for improved data collection, climate-smart agriculture, and policy reforms even as the Kenyan Government plans to establish a national policy on school meals by June 2023 as well as strengthen the efficiency and accountability mechanisms of the school meals initiative.
press release / April 14, 2024
A year of violence in Sudan threatens 24 million children with hunger, violence and lack of schooling
As the conflict in Sudan, reaches its one-year milestone, tens of millions of children and women continue to endure the worst violence imaginable.
video / March 21, 2024
Hope in action: World Vision and MEDAIR's lifeline in Yemen
Almost nine years since conflict in Yemen began, the crisis continues to be overwhelming. In November 2019, World Vision began working in Yemen through partner agencies on the ground to provide aid for children living in poverty and crisis in remote communities in Southern Yemen.
publication / November 20, 2023
Breaking Down Barriers to Achieve Universal Access to Sanitation in Kenya
Join World Vision Kenya in catalysing change this World Toilet Day! Discover innovative solutions for universal sanitation access in Kenya.
landing page / August 27, 2023
Building Resilience and Ensuring Protective Hygiene in WASH and Disaster Risk Reduction
publication / March 17, 2023
Piped Water and System Strengthening: Government partnership for WASH services in Ethiopia
Case study on the the Water4Life+ project, jointly launched in 2021 by World Vision, the Government of Ethiopia, and the Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF). In 2022, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation (CNHF) provided additional funding through the SAFE4HCFs project to strengthen and support sustainability of WASH services in 62 health centers. The overall goal is to transform the lives of 1.6 million people and schoolchildren in Ethiopia through improving access to safe water, sanitation facilities, and hygiene practices in healthcare facilities, schools and their communities.
publication / January 19, 2024
WASH in Fragile Contexts Project Summary
A fragile context is a geographic area where political and social pressures make people vulnerable to conflict and fracture institutions that should protect them. It is often characterised by violence and instability that impact social, political, and economic life. Additionally, fragile contexts face environmental challenges and climate change such as recurring natural disasters, flooding, or drought.
This project aims to document how to deliver high-quality WASH services in fragile contexts and to assess short-term and longer-term effects of high levels of coverage of these WASH services on fragility, vulnerability, and resilience. These projects are being implemented in Bangladesh, Burundi, and Mozambique, each facing a unique combination of fragility ranging from remote cyclone-prone hilly regions in Bangladesh, to extremely low-income drought-and-flood affected districts in Mozambique. This diversity of location allows World Vision to better document and demonstrate the impact of focused programming within the project itself, as well as translate these learnings to improve WASH implementation in other fragile contexts for both World Vision and the broader sector.