How women in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and Vietnam are changing their workplaces
When you think about your wellbeing and work, what would make a difference to you?
Read stories showcasing the human impact of CARE's work around the world.
When you think about your wellbeing and work, what would make a difference to you?
After participating in Ethiopia's SWEEP project one woman said, “We are now heard; before we used to only listen.”
“When the communities sit down and then they talk, they come up with the solutions that would work, not things that are just made up to say just to end the story.”
The Omicron variant has made it clear that "no one is safe until everyone is safe." Investing in getting vaccines to the last mile for 70% of the global population, and paying the health care workers who do it, is the only way to end the pandemic.
What would you do if your grocery bill dropped by 66% this month? Where would the extra income go?
Pollution from the global apparel industry hurts women and girls the most, since they do most of the work to get clean water at home. Decreasing pollution without cutting jobs is possible. How? By helping women take charge.
In the 5 minutes it takes you to read this, 152 girls under the age of 18 will get married—whether they want to or not.
As we begin this year's 16 Days of Activism to End Gender-Based Violence, we take a look at the creative ways that CARE teams have been working to end gender-based violence during a pandemic.
Diving into CARE’s work with fisheries, aquaculture, coastal ecosystems protection, and water resource management.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.