article / March 23, 2025
Empowering Communities Through Disaster Risk Reduction Education
Empowering Mokhotlong’s youth through Disaster Risk Reduction education, fostering resilience, preparedness, and community safety against climate hazards.
publication / May 6, 2025
Mid-Term Update: Country Strategy 2023–2027
World Vision Cambodia Updates Country Strategy (2023–2027)
publication / April 30, 2025
World Vision Cambodia Country Capacity Factsheet
Country Capacity Factsheet
article / April 30, 2025
“Now We Feel Safe”: How Xito’s Family Built a Stronger Future Through Disaster Preparedness
Discover how disaster preparedness training helped 12-year-old Xito’s family in Mozambique build a safe, storm-resistant home, with World Vision’s support, proving that with the right knowledge, communities can protect their children and build resilient futures.
article / January 30, 2025
Strengthening Resilience: A Collective Call for Action in Disaster Risk Reduction
World Vision Lesotho’s National Director emphasizes disaster preparedness, resilience, and child protection at the National Dialogue on Disaster Risk Reduction.
publication / January 27, 2025
Phase II Study: Disaster Risk Reduction Programming in Asia and the Pacific
Disaster Risk Reduction Programming in Asia and the Pacific
publication / April 23, 2025
Regreening Communities Supplementary Guidance Note: Fragile Contexts
World Vision's Regreening Communities Project Model addresses climate change and environmental degradation by guiding communities through a participatory environmental restoration process. A tailored set of solutions is selected by each community including scaling-up indigenous restoration practices, strengthening government partnerships for restoration, and introducing proven practices like Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR).
article / May 6, 2025
Turning the Tide on Malaria: Mozambique Calls for Greater Investment in Social and Behaviour Change
Innovative campaigns, local partnerships, and community-driven strategies offer hope in the fight against one of Mozambique’s deadliest diseases.