![CARE staff making notes whiles speaking with other woman](/sites/default/files/styles/promo/public/2023-03/CARE%20staff%20speaking%20with%20other%20woman.png.webp?itok=gf3pLhJ1)
Sex, age (and more) still matter: Data collection, analysis, and use in humanitarian practice
The report highlights the insufficient use of disaggregated data in humanitarian programming and why it is urgent to cover this knowledge gap.
The report highlights the insufficient use of disaggregated data in humanitarian programming and why it is urgent to cover this knowledge gap.
Women around the globe shared with CARE the impacts compounding crises have had in their lives since 2020. We analyzed their reflections and developed recommendations on how to act collectively to help alleviate these impacts.
CARE started implementing programs in Yemen in 1992 and now has a long history of implementing programming to increase people’s ability to cope with present and future crises. The following report highlights CARE Yemen's most important initiatives of 2022.
Earthquakes are gender neutral but their impacts are not. CARE's Rapid Gender Analysis (RGA) Brief explores existing gender, age and disability data and information to understand pre-existing vulnerabilities and capacities and how best humanitarians can respond to meet people’s different needs.
CARE International's 2020 Sexual Harassment, Exploitation and Abuse (SHEA) Transparency Report, available in English, Spanish, French, and Arabic.
CARE shines the light on the ten humanitarian crises that received the least media attention in 2022. All of which, for the first time, are in Africa.
In FY2021, CARE and partners reached 100.2 million people with 1,495 projects and initiatives across 102 countries.
Gender inequality is a key driver of the global hunger crisis but food policies continue to erase its impact on food insecurity and ignore the capacity of women to offer solutions that are best adapted to their needs.
Oxfam and CARE carried out a research and learning project with the goal of highlighting the perspectives of feminist organizations and WROs on their experiences of collaboration with INGOs, and to draw lessons from their views, ideas and ways of working.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.