Direct Action
Title | Location | Grantee | Amount | Start Sort ascending | End |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Campos de Esperanza (Fields of Hope)Campos de Esperanza (Fields of Hope) engages the government, the private sector, and civil society to reduce child labor in migrant agricultural communities, particularly in the coffee and sugarcane sectors in Veracruz and Oaxaca. The project links children and youth to existing educational programs and refers vulnerable households to existing government programs to improve income and reduce the need for child labor.
MexicoCdE_meval.pdf
(926.6 KB)
|
Mexico | World Vision | $11,000,000 | 11/11/2016 | 09/30/2023 |
EMPOWER: Increasing Economic and Social Empowerment for Adolescent Girls and Vulnerable Women in ZambiaThe EMPOWER project will reduce child labor in Zambia’s eastern province by increasing adolescent girls and vulnerable women’s access to acceptable work and high-quality training opportunities. In addition, the project will increase public awareness on the importance of addressing child labor and strengthen efforts amongst government and the private sector towards gender equality through the promotion of acceptable work for adolescent girls and vulnerable women.
Zambia_Empower_meval.pdf
(2.1 MB)
Zambia_Empower_feval.pdf
(1.67 MB)
|
Zambia | Winrock International | $5,000,000 | 11/01/2016 | 10/31/2020 |
Supporting Sustainable and Child Labor Free Vanilla-Growing Communities in SAVA (SAVABE)The SAVABE project will aim to reduce child labor in the production of vanilla in the Sava region of Madagascar. The project will assist the vanilla industry to eliminate child labor in Madagascar’s vanilla supply chain and will build the capacity of Madagascar’s law enforcement to enforce child labor laws.
Madagascar_Savabe_meval.pdf
(1.13 MB)
|
Madagascar | International Labor Organization (ILO) | $4,000,000 | 11/01/2016 | 08/31/2020 |
ABK3 LEAPThe ABK3 project raised awareness, strengthened advocacy, and built the capacity of community, government, and sugar industry stakeholders to reduce exploitative child labor in 11 sugarcane producing provinces in the Philippines. The project provided educational support to help children succeed and stay in school, and assisted families in increasing agricultural productivity, finding alternative sources of income, and linking to social protection programs in order to alleviate the root causes of child labor.
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Philippines | World Vision | $16,500,000 | 09/30/2011 | 08/31/2016 |