publication / March 24, 2026
ENOUGH Campaign Report 2025 - West Africa Region
World Vision’s ENOUGH Campaign Report 2025 highlights progress on child nutrition, school feeding, and policy change across West Africa.
publication / March 9, 2026
Policy Insights in Ending Child Hunger and Malnutrition
This policy brief introduces the ENOUGH Campaign in East Africa and invites you to be part of a practical response rooted in bold hope to end child hunger and malnutrition. It explains the challenge clearly, highlights what is working, and sets out actions that governments, donors, businesses, civil society, communities and friends of children can take together. The goal is simple and urgent: to make sure every child has ENOUGH of the right food to grow well, learn in school and thrive.
article / March 25, 2026
World Vision at HNPW 2026: Strengthening Hope, Protection and Lasting Impact for Children in Crisis
At the Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Week (HNPW) 2026, World Vision demonstrated how child-centred, evidence-driven approaches can deliver greater impact, efficiency, and resilience at a moment when humanitarian needs are rising and resources are under intense strain. Across seven high-impact sessions, in partnership with UN agencies like WFP, FAO, clusters and networks like School Meals Coalition, Food Security Cluster and the Cash Learning and Partnership (CALP) Network, World Vision representatives helped shape global conversations on the Humanitarian Reset, bringing practical field experience, strong partnerships, and a clear focus on outcomes for children and communities.
article / March 25, 2026
Uganda’s Water Crisis Has a Gender Problem — And a Gender Solution
This article is about how to fill the gender gap in uganda's water crisis
opinion / March 17, 2026
In every crisis, women carry the weight, but who carries them?
Juma Ignatius says women bear the brunt of climate and humanitarian crises yet are sidelined. Empowering women’s leadership is vital for children’s futures.
publication / March 9, 2026
Policy Overview | Famine Prevention & Food Security
Famine is not a natural disaster and can be prevented. Across the world’s hunger hotspots, early warnings are clear, yet governments continue to act too late – or not at all. Conflict, blockades, and the denial of humanitarian access, not food scarcity, are driving a deepening hunger crisis, with children suffering first and longest. As aid budgets are cut, the gap between need and response is widening fast. This is a false economy: preventing famine costs far less than responding once lives are already lost. World Vision warns famine can be predicted and prevented – but only if leaders act early, protect civilians, and put children at the centre of hunger prevention.
publication / March 19, 2026
World Vision Iraq Country Profile FY25
World Vision Iraq supports vulnerable communities since 2014, promoting resilience, recovery, and child well-being through multi-sector programmes and advocacy.
publication / March 16, 2026
World Vision Bangladesh 2025 Annual Report
In FY2025, World Vision Bangladesh reached 6.5M people, supporting child protection, safe water, nutrition, and climate resilience to build brighter futures for children.
press release / March 5, 2026
Afghans at Risk of Hunger in Wake of Conflict Escalation in Iran, New Research Shows
New research by World Vision and Samuel Hall reveals a growing crisis in Afghanistan. Mass deportations and lost remittances have pushed thousands into deep debt. Families now face severe food insecurity and harmful coping mechanisms. The study confirms that children suffer most in this economic downturn.