publication / January 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 / October 22, 2011
‘You Will Be My Witnesses’: Unavoidable witness in the work of World Vision
This resource is meant to explore the meaning and implications of World Vision’s call to witness to the kingdom of God and the gospel of Christ through our life and work.
publication / June 25, 2013
Enriching the Future
Responding to Child Vulnerability through EU Enlargement and Neighbourhood Policies
publication / February 25, 2016
Measuring Freedom from Violence
Following the adoption by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child of General Comment No.
publication / October 10, 2019
Child Rights Barometer: Measuring Government Efforts to Protect Girls and Boys in Eswatini
At World Vision, we celebrate the significant progress Eswatini has made towards achieving global and national targets in key areas of child well-being. Children account for over half of the country’s population, yet their rights and needs are often seen as peripheral to development efforts.
publication / December 15, 2015
Final Evaluation - ART programme
ART program was funded by the government of Australia, and it was designed based on the World Vision’s prior three years’ experience in the region in anti-trafficking area.
publication / June 17, 2020
Market Systems Development Toolkit
This toolkit provides practical guidelines for World Vision (WV) programs on how to apply a more systemic lens to their livelihood, economic, and private sector development portfolios.
publication / July 10, 2018
Annual Report 2017 (Nepali)
World Vision International Nepal’s 2017 Annual Report provides an overview of our work as we seek to realise our strategic goal: To address the causes of poverty and inequity for the sustained well-being of one million children in Nepal by 2020.