How Kids in Madagascar Grow Taller
RAN-AINA ran from 2014-2017 in Madagascar with $1.2 million from the European Union. It reached 18,000 people directly and 82,068 people indirectly.
Read stories showcasing the human impact of CARE's work around the world.
RAN-AINA ran from 2014-2017 in Madagascar with $1.2 million from the European Union. It reached 18,000 people directly and 82,068 people indirectly.
Want to reduce poaching and deforestation, improve incomes, reduce the poverty rate, and get people more food? Just ask CARE Madagascar.
How thinking big and acting small makes students smarter.
Telma is a Malagasy telecommunications company with a difference, and it’s not in their branding or services, but in the way they carry out their corporate social responsibility.
Water is something that many of us in the developed world have the luxury to take for granted. It is available, on tap, hot and cold, 24/7, any given day of the week. But in the countries of Southern Africa affected by the El Niño weather phenomenon it…
Raivo, a 41-year old women with two children, living in the village of Andaboly tells CARE how she experienced cyclone Haruna’s landfall.
On February 22 at six o’clock in the morning, Cyclone Haruna made landfall in southwestern Madagascar. The storm went across the island over a period of 24 hours, bringing with it extreme winds up to 200 km/h.
Blogs depicting the devastation in Madagascar caused by Cyclone Giovanna and CARE's response on the ground By John Uniack Davis, Country Director, CARE Madagascar
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.