Stories & analysis
Cambodia's National Action Plan on Prevention and Response to Violence Against Children (opens in a new tab)
This National Action Plan is a roadmap for relevant ministries, institutions at the national, sub-national, development partners, civil society organizations and the private sector to prevent and respond to violence against children.
via UNICEF Cambodia
National Action Plan on Prevention and Response to Violence Against Children 2025-2030 (opens in a new tab)
The Royal Government of the Kingdom of Cambodia considers violence against children a priority that all ministries, institutions, the private sector and civil society must work together to prevent and respond.
via Royal Government of Cambodia
Together we bloom: Digital and Community Seeds by powerful girls (opens in a new tab)
When we support girls and young women to develop leadership skills and learn to use digital tools, they become critical agents of social change towards equality.
via Together for Girls
Taking data to action to the next level (opens in a new tab)
The Violence Against Children and Youth Surveys (VACS) data dashboard makes it easier for researchers, policymakers, and advocates to understand the prevalence of violence against children and use this evidence to call for and take action to end this issue.
via Together for Girls
Lessons from School-Related Gender-Based Violence Prevention Intervention in Zambia (opens in a new tab)
In 2023, the Keeping Girls in School program under the Girls’ Education and Women’s Empowerment and Livelihoods project, launched the Empowerment Pilot (EP), an ambitious intervention to reduce school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV).
via World Bank
Keeping Girls In School: Lessons Learned from a School and Community-Based Case Management System (opens in a new tab)
The project was launched in 2016 to address inequalities in educational attainment related to gender and poverty and reduce secondary school drop-out rates among vulnerable adolescent girls.
via Open Knowledge Repository
15 years of the Lanzarote Convention: hope, dignity and progress (opens in a new tab)
The Lanzarote Convention was the first legally binding international treaty to require countries to criminalise all forms of sexual abuse of children. Matthew McVarish is a Brave Co-founder and has a permanent seat at the Council of Europe.
via Matthew McVarish, Brave Movement
Screening for sexual violence against children in schools in refugee settings in Uganda (opens in a new tab)
This intervention aimed to proactively identify child and adolescent survivors of sexual violence and connect them to care.
via Together for Girls
Overwhelming vote by MEPs to end time limits on prosecuting child abusers is a major step towards keeping children safe (opens in a new tab)
For the first time ever, MEPs voted to support abolishing time limits on the prosecution of child sexual abuse crimes across the EU.
via Brave Movement