publication / April 12, 2024
Child Protection Minimum Requirements - Implementation Case Study: Cambodia
CPMR, Case Study, Cambodia
publication / April 23, 2024
Putting Children First for Sustainable Development
New research to analyize the economic beneift of Official Development Assistance (ODA) programming that directly or indirectly targets children found that every $1USD of child-related ODA directly or indirectly results in a $10USD return and highlights that investing in children is a way to maximise the benefit that donors see from their ODA programmes.
publication / April 5, 2024
Full Case Study on Child Protection Minimum Requirements: Learnings from World Vision Burundi, Cambodia & Nepal
Explore World Vision's transformative journey with Child Protection Minimum Requirements (CPMRs), showcasing community-led interventions, reporting mechanisms, and adolescent empowerment in Cambodia, Nepal, and Burundi.
publication / April 10, 2024
Promotion of Youth Skills and Employability (PYSE)
Select and support the most vulnerable youth between 15 and 25 years old with vocational training, on the job training, and relevant life skills to increase access to decent and productive employment opportunities and ensure demand-driven skills and career decisions meet market demands.
article / April 22, 2024
Seasoning malnutrition away in Laotian children through a sustainable recipe
Draped in a dense thicket, the district perfectly camouflages a startling truth. As per a baseline survey conducted by World Vision, in 2022, stunting rates in children were reported high as 56% and 78% of the households were facing moderate and severe food insecurity in Phonexay.
publication / January 16, 2024
Youth for Change Project in Cambodia
Youth for Change Project aims to ensure that adolescents and youth participate as agents of positive change.
article / April 19, 2024
Ukrainian farmer promotes healthy food and lifestyle through her flourishing green business
Renata is one of 280 Ukrainians who have received assistance in starting or expanding their businesses. She became interested in farming during her maternity leave. The family created a 30-meter foil tent using their own resources and a minor loan from friends. Unfortunately, with the onset of the war, they had a staff shortage, leaving Renata, her husband and their three children without their primary source of income. Recently, they reopened their small business, Dorcas helping them in purchasing a greenhouse to expand their crop production.
publication / January 16, 2024
GESI Impact Stories in Cambodia
The approach advances World Vision’s mission of promoting human transformation and development by reaching out to the most vulnerable children and adults and challenging the root causes of vulnerabilities that sustain gender inequality and social exclusion such as restrictive socio-cultural norms, unequal power relations, and disempowering systems.