African Partners for Child Poverty
VerifiedKampala, Uganda
Works to combat child poverty and protect the rights of vulnerable children and orphans through community-based empowerment programs.
Browse our network of vetted child rights organisations working across the globe.
Showing 12 of 56 organisations
Kampala, Uganda
Works to combat child poverty and protect the rights of vulnerable children and orphans through community-based empowerment programs.
Seattle, United States
Ensures that children in foster care experience stable, loving homes by supporting foster and adoptive families.
Sofia, Bulgaria
Provides psychosocial and legal support to survivors of domestic violence, human trafficking, and abuse.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Promotes community-based child protection and works to keep vulnerable children with their families rather than in institutions.
Casablanca, Morocco
Rehabilitates and reintegrates children in difficult situations, including street children and child victims of violence, through education and psychosocial support.
New Delhi, India
Protects and empowers street and working children by providing education, healthcare, and life-skills training.
Quezon City, Philippines
Provides specialised therapeutic services, legal assistance, and advocacy for children who have survived sexual abuse.
London, United Kingdom
Works with international partners to resolve complex cross-border child protection cases and reunite separated families.
Winneba, Ghana
Rescues, rehabilitates, and educates children who have been trafficked into forced labour, particularly in the Lake Volta fishing industry.
Georgetown, Guyana
Works to protect Guyanese children from violence and abuse while advocating for family-based care alternatives to institutionalisation.
Monrovia, Liberia
Advocates for child rights, education, and protection, with a heavy focus on empowering youth affected by poverty and conflict.
Dublin, Ireland
Provides specialised therapy and support services for children, families, and groups affected by child sexual abuse.