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The future of work is sexist. Let's fix that.
New CARE report: COVID-19’s impact on the lives of women and girls has rolled back progress on gender equality by a generation
New CARE report: COVID-19’s impact on the lives of women and girls has rolled back progress on gender equality by a generation
The work represents the first steps towards CARE's Vision 2030: supporting 200 million people to overcome poverty and social injustice
After closures during the government changes, schools have re-opened for boys of all ages, but girls above six have been home for 10 months
The project aims to test an innovative pilot activity, layering Social Protection and WASH interventions targeting adolescent girls who have been disproportionately affected by coping mechanisms adopted during lockdown, to support their return to school after the several waves of school closure in Zimbabwe.
Through this policy, CARE commits to ensuring that gender equality is fully incorporated in all our work both as a universal human right and an end in itself, as well as a means to overcome poverty and social injustice more effectively.
This report highlights case studies and lessons learned from 20 countries during COVID-19. The evidence shows that we must invest in gender equality in health systems to prepare for and respond to the next pandemic.
CARE Rwanda has figured out how to drop social acceptance of gender-based violence by 83%. Let’s have them come teach the USA.
CARE India has figured out a way to reduce malnutrition by 45% by INCREASING the reported workload for women. Find out how.
The Malian government is planning to give money to VSLAs. That’s just one of the many successes of CARE's Women on the Move. Learn more.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.