98 million adolescent girls around the world are not in school. This is the story one from Tharaka, Kenya.
Read MoreREBECCA'S STORY

Morgana Wingard
98 million adolescent girls around the world are not in school. This is the story one from Tharaka, Kenya.
Read MoreOn the International Day for the Conservation of Mangroves, we introduce you to this remarkable tree and show you how it has helped one Indonesian community stand up to Mother Nature.
Read MoreOn World Mosquito Day, we introduce you to a group of women warriors who are battling dengue in Indonesia… and winning!
Read More98 million adolescent girls around the world are not in school. This is the story one from Blantyre, Malawi.
Read MorePartnering with communities to sustainably grow and manage Malawi’s forests.
Read More98 million adolescent girls around the world are not in school. This is the story one from Lucknow, India.
Read MoreAn inspiring pilot program regarding service delivery in the education sector began in the Western Mongolian province of Khovd just over a year ago and it has already seen positive results. And it’s all down to citizen engagement.
Read MoreGetting medical care to the last mile in Liberia.
Read MoreHelping communities to sustainably manage Malawi’s fishing resource.
Read MoreHear the stories of why U.S. investments in development matter.
Read MoreUSAID is working to reach high-risk populations (including fishermen) where they live and work, with coordinated interventions to reduce the number of new infections and link HIV+ patients to treatment.
Read MoreCuring child tuberculosis in Bangladesh.
Read MoreA paramedic's quest to deliver healthy babies in Bangladesh
Read MoreBy revamping U.S. food aid, we could feed up to 10 million more people and save countless lives.
Read MoreIf you invest in your soil, it will grow.
Read MoreImproving health information systems in Liberia.
Read MoreOpen government in Liberia helps communities to have a conversation about land rights.
Read MoreMost girls in Priyanka’s home district are forced to marry before their 18th birthdays, some as young as 7 or 8. Many poor marginalized Dalits are under intense pressure from neighbors and family to marry children young. Priyanka is a young woman who was a participant in a program called Chunauti—a child-marriage prevention project implemented by CARE and funded by USAID. Through the program, which provided the families of 220 girls with various forms of financial aid, Priyanka’s family received a deposit of 18,000 Nepali rupees (roughly $180) into a bank account for the family. The money would not be accessible until Priyanka turned 18 and only if she remained unmarried until then. Now 18, she is graduating from secondary school and actually works as a Social Mobilizer for CARE’s Tipping Point program. Given the proposed U.S. federal assistance budget cuts, Priyanka personifies the kind of lasting impact that can be realized from USG-funded work.
Location: Nepal
Client: CARE
Project: Tipping Point
Funder: USAID
During a visit to India, Senator Coons explains why foreign aid matters now more than ever.
Read MoreSenator Merkley on how U.S. aid in Nepal helps families invest in a brighter future.
Read More