video / March 19, 2026
Child Ambassador Praises World Vision Eswatini's New National Office Strategy
A strategy like this is not just about ambition — it’s about what it will mean in the lives of nearly 400,000 children who will grow, learn, and thrive because of it.
Standing with the team and our partners as this next chapter begins. 👏🏾
publication / February 23, 2026
World Vision East Africa Impact Report 2025
Despite escalating conflict, climate shocks, economic instability and widespread displacement, we reached over 26 million people, including 16.4 million children
publication / March 24, 2026
World Vision Uganda Annual Report 2025
World Vision Uganda Annual Report captures key achievements of Financial Year 2025
article / January 28, 2026
Stitching His Future: How sponsorship gave Isaac a second chance at life
transforming the lives of children with skills development.
publication / March 9, 2026
World Vision Mali 2025 Annual Report
World Vision Mali’s 2025 Annual Report highlights key achievements improving children’s lives through education, WASH, nutrition and humanitarian assistance.
publication / March 19, 2026
Armenia Country Profile FY25
World Vision Armenia, active since 1988, delivers aid and development via six offices, supports 500,000 children, strengthens systems, drives policy, and builds resilient communities.
publication / March 12, 2026
2025 Child‑Friendly Impact Report
Children are at the heart of everything we do, their voices, dreams, and well-being drive our mission. We are excited to share that amid the ever-growing humanitarian needs we reached 16.4 Million children in the East Africa Region.
publication / March 23, 2026
Children's Groups as Partners: Global Learning Brief
A Global Learning Brief on measuring how the enabling environments of children's groups enhances child well-being and programme outcomes.
article / March 25, 2026
Water security in East Asia: Climate change is deepening the inequality divide
On World Water Day 2026, East Asia stands at a critical crossroads. Climate change is transforming water, once a foundation of economic growth and social stability, into one of the region’s sharpest drivers of inequality. And this inequality is not evenly felt. It falls hardest on women and girls, children, persons with disabilities, and rural and marginalised communities whose access to safe water was already fragile.
By Alexander Pandian, WASH Programmes Senior Advisor, World Vision East Asia