publication / Abril 24, 2024
Country Fact Sheet 2024: World Vision in Burkina Faso
Here is World Vision's 2024 country profile for Burkina Faso. Click here to find out more:
article / Abril 21, 2024
Bring me back to life
Sami* retells his experience from a survivor's point of view.
article / Maio 2, 2024
Youth empowerment, the best investment for the future
Quality education, especially for girls, stands as the most effective means of mitigating various social issues confronting society. Education empowers girls, granting them increased autonomy, and serves as a powerful tool in alleviating poverty and domestic violence....
article / Maio 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 / Abril 22, 2024
NextGen Aid: Technical Appendix
Technical Appendix for the NextGen Aid project, an economic appraisal to estimate the return on investment (ROI) from child-related Official Development Assistance (ODA).
publication / Abril 17, 2024
World Vision and World Food Programme Facts and Figures 2023
For more than 30 years, World Vision and the World Food Programme (WFP) have partnered around a shared vision for a hunger-free world for the world’s most vulnerable children, families and communities. Together, World Vision and WFP provide assistance to disaster-affected people to save lives, improve health and education, and empower vulnerable communities to become self-reliant, now and in future.
The 2023 World Vision and WFP partnership report demonstrates the impact of the two organisations working together resulting from an extensive network of strategic, operational relationships at the national, regional and global levels.
press release / Maio 11, 2024
World Vision warns that the escalation of the conflict in Gaza will have long-term impacts on children’s physical and mental health and well-being
World Vision is deeply concerned about the reports of intensifying military operations in Rafah, which is likely to trigger a humanitarian catastrophe in this ‘city of children’, who will be disproportionally impacted.