publication / November 24, 2023
Scaling Climate Action and Environmental Stewardship in a Fragile World
This publication reflects the combined insights of World Vision U.S. technical teams including Food Security and Livelihoods, WASH, Health, Child Protection and Education, as well as cross-cutting teams such as Humanitarian Emergency Assistance and Gender Equality and Social Inclusion.
publication / September 18, 2023
Integrating GESI in WASH: A Reference Guide
World Vision’s Gender Equality and Social Inclusion (GESI) approach actively strives to examine, question, and change harmful social norms and power imbalances as a means of reaching gender equality and social inclusion objectives in a programme area.
This reference guide is designed to help WASH practitioners implement GESI-transformative WASH programmes by supporting change across all five GESI domains – access, decision-making, participation, systems, and well-being. It provides information on how to design, implement, monitor and evaluate a WASH project or programme to address GESI.
publication / September 20, 2023
Scalable Approaches for Children and Youth-led Disaster Risk Reduction
This report describes the efforts of World Vision Bangladesh to train young volunteers to engage in disaster risk reduction activities that can be scaled up across the country.
publication / March 20, 2023
Global WASH Capacity Statement
Over the past 37 years, World Vision’s work in the WASH sector has grown exponentially. Most recently, between 2011 and 2021 our WASH programming grew by over 500%, enabling us now to directly impact more than 3 million people each year with access to clean water—which is 6.5 times more than in 2011. With more than 1,200 technical WASH staff members guiding our work in 42 countries, World Vision has emerged as a leader in its global commitment to accelerate universal and equitable access to WASH services under Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6.
publication / June 12, 2023
Keeping our promise for the children and families of Syria and the region
Ahead of the Brussels 7 donors’ conference for Syria and the region, World Vision has compiled a policy brief outlining humanitarian needs in Syria and host countries – namely Jordan, Lebanon, Turkiye and Iraq – while calling on donors to step up funding and long-term solutions for the Syria crisis that has been impacting refugee and IDP women, girls and boys for the past 12 years.
publication / May 14, 2023
Reducing the Impact of Global Warming on Families and Children
Reducing the impact of global warming on families and children in Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, and Lebanon through “climate-conscious” interventions
publication / June 14, 2023
Invisible and Forgotten: Displaced children hungrier and at more risk than ever
The number of child refugees has more than doubled since 2005; on top of their increased vulnerability, they are facing hunger and malnourishment as well as complex situations that put their safety at risk. Many forcibly displaced children live in areas often overlooked by the international community and aid resources due to global priorities. Girls and boys are not responsible for conflicts, climate change, or responses to global pandemics, nor do they bear any responsibility for food supply shortages or hyperinflation, yet these issues continue to disproportionately affect their well-being and jeopardise their access to the education critical to helping pull them out of the vicious cycle of poverty and hunger.
publication / October 19, 2022
WASH Research & Learning Agenda
World Vision's WASH Research & Learning Agenda summarises our current learning priorities related to water, sanitation and hygiene.
publication / March 12, 2023
DIRE CONSEQUENCES: 12 YEARS OF SUFFERING IN SYRIA
DIRE CONSEQUENCES:
12 YEARS OF
SUFFERING IN SYRIA
publication / September 12, 2022
WASH Project Model
World Vision's WASH Project Model (PM) is the primary guiding document for our WASH programmes around the world. The WASH PM provides a framework for project implementation in our targeted intervention settings: communities and households, schools, healthcare facilities and emergencies. It also describes our essential WASH interventions: water access, sanitation access, hygiene access and WASH behaviour change. These interventions have proven to be effective for the implementation of programmes that are impactful, scalable and sustainable in the places where World Vision works.