Gendered Implications of COVID-19 - Executive Summary
CARE is deeply concerned about the implications that the spread of COVID-19 might have on women and girls in development and humanitarian settings.
Browse our resource library to find our latest reports and publications.
CARE is deeply concerned about the implications that the spread of COVID-19 might have on women and girls in development and humanitarian settings.
English: In April 2018, CARE Syria and CARE UK contracted GK Consulting LLC (US) to conduct a research study on changing gender roles and norms amongst Syrian women refugees. This research was an extension of CARE’s 2018-2019 Syria Resilience Researc
English: Understanding resilience: Perspectives from Syrians This research prioritised in-depth and community-based qualitative methods, using a Participatory Ethnographic Evaluation and Research (PEER) methodology in which researchers already living
English: Gender Analysis: Prevention and Response to Ebola Virus Disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo [January 2020]
With CARE’s fourth global Suffering In Silence report, we are starting to see a trend of certain countries annually remaining on the list of the most under-reported crises. While we expanded the analysis in 2019 by including Spanish and Arabic online…
Mozambique has the thirteenth highest level of women’s participation in parliament in the world yet, at the same time, a third of women report experiencing violence, reflecting entrenched gender inequalities within society. These inequalities contribute…
Disasters have strongly increased in both frequency and impact, with climate change as one of the main contributors to more extreme, frequent, and unpredictable weather.
Yemen is facing a third outbreak of cholera that threatens to worsen the country’s already dire humanitarian crisis. The lack of a functioning health system as well as limited access to safe water and hygiene makes it very difficult to control the spread…
This is the third consecutive year that CARE publishes its report “Suffering In Silence”. It serves as a call for the global community to speak up for people in crises who are otherwise forgotten and to help them overcome hardship.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.