article / May 7, 2024
A boy, a school bag, and a community hotline
Meet Jubani: A 10-year-old from Marawi City, Philippines, returned to school with a new bag from World Vision. Your gifts change lives!
publication / January 18, 2024
Listening to Child Brides Research Report
A research study to identify the experiences, needs and agency of married adolescent girls and young women in Bangladesh, Mauritania, Nepal and Tanzania to inform recommendations on child marriage.
article / March 6, 2024
What happened after World Vision left? Revisit to a closed Program Area in Mozambique
This is a description of how the communities where World Vision operated for a certain period are coping up since World Vision left the area.
press release / May 7, 2024
New World Vision report reveals only 5% of global aid targets children despite every $1 resulting in $10 benefits
Press release that highlights the new research by World Vision and Ernst and Young finds the impact of official development assistance for children brings strong return on investment (ROI)
article / August 21, 2023
Sponsorships transforming the lives of children in Ethiopia
A team of Chosen Vision Trip Visitors from the United States of America consisting of four churches represented by six VIP Pastors visited World Vision Ethiopia Bena Tsemay Area Programme from 15-18 August 2023.
article / May 6, 2024
Champion In The Fight Against Malnutrition: How Fortified Porridge Saved Augustinho
This is a story about malnutrition recovery in central Mozambique
article / December 1, 2023
Child Protection: 3 ways we can protect children in conflict zones.
See how Child Sponsorship allows World Vision to protect children in conflict zones.
publication / September 28, 2022
Rolling Out "Chosen" In Child Sponsorship as a means of Enhancing the Child's Voice
In 2019, World Vision Zambia launched an initiative called 'Chosen'. As opposed to having donor sponsors choosing children to be sponsored, under 'Chosen', children that are registered in the World Vision Programme participate in choosing who would be their sponsors. This implies that 'Chosen' puts the power to select sponsors in children's hands.
This Technical Brief highlights how 'Chosen' has enhanced children's voices in securing sponsorship for community development.