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Flag of South Sudan Africa - East and Central

South Sudan

CARE started work in: 1970

South Sudan ranks 185 out of 189 on the Human Development Index (HDI). CARE International’s work in South Sudan has broadened to include health, nutrition, food security, peacebuilding, and gender-based violence protection.

History of CARE International’s work in South Sudan 

CARE International has been working in the now independent South Sudan since the 1970s. In 1993, we responded to famine by providing humanitarian relief to internally displaced people in Western Equatoria.  

The signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005 allowed CARE South Sudan to expand into Jonglei and Upper Nile States to support returnees from the refugee camps, and we have since broadened operations to include health, nutrition, food security and livelihoods, peacebuilding, and gender-based violence prevention. 

What CARE International does in South Sudan

More than a decade into independence, South Sudan faces multiple crises including extreme food insecurity, flooding, and armed conflict. Through a combination of long-term staff and our established partnerships we adapt and scale up our humanitarian work when needed.  

Since 2020, CARE South Sudan has been responding to COVID-19. Response efforts include raising awareness about prevention methods and supporting the government with transporting vaccines.  

Reach and impact data
Total participants reached in 2023
  • Direct 2,616,118
  • Women & girls 59%
  • Indirect -
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REGION

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Total reach
  • Direct reach:
  • Indirect reach:
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SUMMARY

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Please note that the figures in this site may not be the same as those reported to donors or host governments based on different reporting periods. CARE's international aggregated reporting mechanisms always use the Fiscal Year from July to June.

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Malnutrition is not just a problem of the young: supporting South Sudan’s elderly

The health facility is already crowded with long queue of families with young children, pregnant and lactating mother’s, and elderly women and men, all of whom are the most vulnerable to malnutrition. They wait patiently for their turn to see the nutrition workers. Due to the big increase in the numbers of nutrition patients in all the CARE nutrition facilities, staff have had to designate specific days for the treatment of all of these different groups.

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Gender in Brief: South Sudan

Since gaining its independence in 2011, South Sudan experienced renewed conflicts in 2013 and 2016 which have significantly undermined the development gains achieved post-independence and contributed to a worsened humanitarian situation. Gender relations in South Sudan are shaped by the social and economic realities of being one of the world’s poorest countries and by decades of conflict.