article / June 8, 2026
From Child Labour Risk to Education: Aklima's Journey Back to School
After leaving home for work and returning exhausted and discouraged, 16-year-old Aklima found a new path through education, family support, and a sewing machine that helped her rebuild her future.
publication / May 26, 2026
World Vision Kenya 2025 Impact Report
Report on World Vision Kenya (2021–2025), reaching 4.5M+ people across 32 counties, including vulnerable children, through projects and advocacy.
publication / June 1, 2026
2025 Annual Report: Child Well-being at the Heart of Our Achievements
This report highlights the progress made in various areas, guided solely by the goal of empowering children and vulnerable communities through the work of World Vision Senegal.
article / May 11, 2026
ESG’s Strategic Edge: Human-Centred Investment as a Business Imperative
Winnie Khor, Resource Development Senior Regional Advisor, World Vision East Asia, was recently invited to speak at the Global CSR and ESG Summit in Bangkok. In her session, she highlighted a growing gap in ESG conversations: while measurement, reporting and Digital/AI continue to advance, the role of human-centric design in achieving real-world impact is often underexplored. This article shares her reflections and how investing in stronger communities can contribute towards more resilient business outcomes.
article / June 5, 2026
From Shy Learners to Champions: How Quiz Competitions Are Transforming Lives at Mwanga Primary School
World Vision is helping learners at Mwanga Primary School excel academically through quiz competitions that build confidence and improve classroom performance. Learners who once used not to do well are now performing better in class and have also boosted their confidence.
article / June 5, 2026
The Reusable Pad Giving Girls a Chance to Learn
World Vision is helping girls like Juliet, 12, from Malawi stay in school by addressing period poverty through reusable sanitary pads. Juliet once missed classes because her family could not afford disposable pads, which cost about K2,000 ($1.15) per packet. World Vision trained and equipped mother groups on the production of reusable sanitary pads, which has turned out to be a transformative solution. As a result, girls are attending classes with confidence, absenteeism has reduced, and hygiene practices have improved across the school.
article / June 5, 2026
Innovation with Integrity: Advancing AI While Protecting Trust Across World Vision SAP
Haidy Wijaya Sung outlines how World Vision SAP balances digital transformation and AI innovation with data protection, integrity, and trust.
publication / June 1, 2026
Rapport Annuel 2025 : le bien-être de l’enfant au cœur des réalisations
Ce Rapport reflète les avancées notées dans divers domaines, avec comme seule boussole, l’épanouissement des enfants et des communautés vulnérables, grâce aux interventions de World Vision Sénégal.