All News and Features

Decline in Measles Deaths an Important Milestone, But Not the End of the Race

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The global effort to roll back measles worldwide is succeeding, but declines in funding threaten to halt further progress. In early December 2008 the Measles Initiative, an international partnership of the American Red Cross, the United Nations Foundation, UNICEF, and the World Health Organization (WHO), announced that the number of deaths from measles had fallen by nearly three-quarters between 2000 and 2007—-from 750,000 to 197,000—thanks in large part to vaccination campaigns being carried out by Global Impact charities and other non-governmental organizations worldwide.

Child-Friendly Spaces Provide Crucial Safe Zones for Refugee Kids

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Right now, instead of playing games and going to school with their friends, an estimated 20 million children and adolescents are living in makeshift camps far away from their homes, communities and loved ones. They are refugees and IDPs (internally displaced persons) forced by war, natural and manmade disasters, persecution and economic collapse to abandon their childhoods. In the past decade alone, an estimated 60 million children have had to live this way.

Three New Charities Join Global Impact Fundraising Network

EngenderHealth, Episcopal Relief & Development and International Medical Corps Selected for Membership

Increased Violence in Darfur Forces 230,000 Additional People from Homes

The violence in the Darfur region of Sudan continues to grow. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon reports that increased violence has forced 230,000 people to flee their homes over the last year.

Fighting the Food Crisis with Sustainable Agriculture

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Skyrocketing food prices are threatening to topple at least 100 million people worldwide into chronic hunger, a crisis that Josette Sheeran, the Executive Director of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has termed the “silent tsunami.” According to Global Impact charity Plan USA, that tsunami consumes more than 10 million lives a year—more than the number who die from tuberculosis, malaria and AIDS combined.

Political Turmoil, Epidemic Threaten Zimbabwe Aid

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Throughout Zimbabwe, Global Impact charities are struggling to resume distribution of vitally needed aid following the temporary halt ordered last summer. In addition to widespread malnutrition, this southern African country is reeling from crop failure, economic collapse and a rapidly spreading outbreak of cholera and accelerating civic violence.

Lebanese Interns Learn Crucial Skills and Build Bridges

Lebanese youth are the future leaders of Lebanon. Their skills and their abilities are crucial to the long-term growth of the Lebanese economy. The Partnership for Lebanon is working to plant the seeds of such growth by teaming with businesses and educational organizations to provide Lebanese youth with the skills they need to compete in a 21st century marketplace.

The "Silent War Against Women and Girls"

Every day millions of women and girls worldwide experience physical, sexual and psychological violence. According to the United Nations, one in three women around the world are likely to be victims of gender-based violence (GBV) in their lifetime, including sexual abuse, rape, genital mutilation, trafficking and forced prostitution. In areas of armed conflict, such violence is increasingly being employed as a strategic weapon of terror.

OPM Recognizes Global Impact-Managed Combined Federal Campaigns for Leadership, Innovation and Record Funding for Charities

The Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital Area and the Combined Federal Campaign-Overseas continue to lead the way in raising funds for those in need around the world.

Rainy Season Brings a New Threat to Earthquake Survivors in China

As China struggles to deal with the aftermath—and aftershocks—of the May 12, 7.9-magnitude earthquake that claimed the lives of 70,000 and displaced nearly 5 million people to date, a new threat has emerged which places the lives and homes of those already suffering at greater risk.

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