In Mauritania, hereditary slavery is not always visibly evident, but its influence remains strong. For generations, the Haratine, a Black ethnic group historically enslaved by the White Moors (Beidane), have been born into lives of servitude, owned as property and made to believe that their bondage is divine will. Women face sexual violence and are forced to bear children who inherit their enslaved status. Entire families work unpaid within a caste system that persists beyond legal abolition. Although Mauritania criminalized slavery in 2007 and reinforced laws in 2015, enforcement remains weak.
Few enslavers have been prosecuted and the government denies that slavery still exists, instead targeting anti-slavery activists who challenge the system. Illiteracy, common among the Haratine, deepens their marginalization, with only half able to read and write. Public education in Mauritania is underfunded and neglected, failing those most in need, while the elite send their children to private schools.
Without birth certificates, many Haratine children are prevented from attending school, reinforcing their exclusion. Nonetheless, communities are establishing their schools in response to systemic neglect. Since 2014, more than 60 grassroots schools have been built by and for the Haratine, providing literacy and empowerment. These initiatives challenge a divided nation, where rural slavery contrasts with urban segregation and where the legacy of slavery persists in slums and segregated neighborhoods.
The Rise of Community-Led Schooling
Pervasive illiteracy and the emergence of community-led schools in Mauritania underscore both significant challenges and the resilient efforts of formerly marginalized communities to reclaim their right to education, a transformative journey from enslavement to education. Although there have been gradual improvements, stark disparities persist, exacerbated by a brain drain of young, educated Mauritanians seeking higher education abroad, leading to a fractured system.
Ali Deng of the Sahel Foundation notes that primary education is highly stratified: wealthy families send their children to elite private schools, the middle class chooses lower-tier private institutions and the impoverished rely on underfunded government schools with few resources. Rural areas are hit hardest, with severe teacher shortages making access nearly impossible. With literacy rates as low as 52% and extreme poverty impacting three-quarters of the population, grassroots organizations have stepped in to fill the gap.
Groups like Graines d’Espoir Mauritania work directly with marginalized communities, offering educational support, nutrition and agricultural programs to promote long-term development. These efforts, often led by residents and supported by diaspora networks, focus on inclusive education, rejecting ethnic or religious discrimination. While the government is gradually expanding access, NGOs and community-led schools in Mauritania enable oppressed groups, such as the Haratin, to overcome systemic barriers and create their routes to literacy and empowerment.
Political Pushback and Progress
Despite Mauritania’s official abolition of slavery in 1981 and subsequent laws against it, the practice continues with alarming impunity. Those advocating for emancipation face relentless political repression. Leading this effort is Biram Dah Abeid, an anti-slavery activist and politician who established the Initiative for the Resurgence of the Abolitionist Movement (IRA-Mauritania).
Abeid is globally recognized for his bravery, receiving awards like the 2013 U.N. Human Rights Prize, the 2016 U.S. State Department’s TIP Hero Award and the 2015 Dutch Human Rights Tulip. Abeid works to free enslaved communities, prosecute slaveholders and challenge the government’s complicity. His activism has come at a personal cost. In 2014, he and 16 fellow activists were arrested during a protest against slaveholder impunity. He was charged with unlawful assembly and sentenced to two years in prison amid international protests.
Although released in 2016, he was re-arrested in 2018, highlighting the government’s effort to silence dissent. Nonetheless, IRA-Mauritania continues grassroots activism through protests, hunger strikes and global advocacy. These suppression tactics reflect a wider pattern of resistance against Black liberation movements, where legal and political systems are weaponized to uphold oppression. Yet, Abedi’s perseverance and international support show that liberated communities are demanding education and justice and redefining resistance narratives amid systemic violence.
The Lasting Effects
In Mauritania, community-led educational and economic programs are transforming freed slave communities by breaking cycles of oppression and reshaping cultural narratives. Organizations like Anti-Slavery International and SOS-Esclaves have supported formerly enslaved individuals, especially Haratine women. They do this through vocational training, financial literacy workshops and small business support, helping hundreds achieve economic independence for the first time.
These initiatives do more than foster livelihoods; they challenge caste hierarchies by promoting self-worth and empowerment. Personal stories, such as Moctar’s, who escaped slavery at age 13 and now aims to become a lawyer, illustrate the psychological freedom these efforts provide. His mother’s initial resistance, rooted in long standing beliefs about caste superiority, highlights the cultural barriers these programs face.
By teaching skills like embroidery, sewing and market entrepreneurship, these workshops offer income opportunities and reshape social roles for Haratines, historically limited to “dirty” or “degrading” work. These community-driven initiatives demonstrate how they can address immediate survival needs while fostering long-term cultural change, turning emancipation into genuine empowerment.
A Path Forward Through Collective Action
Mauritania’s transition from enslavement to education highlights both the persistence of systemic oppression and the empowering role of community-led resistance. Although slavery has been legally abolished, hereditary slavery continues under caste hierarchies, government denial and institutional neglect. Nonetheless, freed communities, especially the Haratine, are creating spaces for empowerment through grassroots schools, vocational programs and economic initiatives in Mauritania.
The growth of community-based schooling, supported by groups like Anti-Slavery International and activists such as Abeid, shows how education can break the cycle of intergenerational trauma. These successes, though hard-won, reveal the contradictions within a state that bans slavery but criminalizes those fighting against it.
The path forward remains challenging. Repressive government actions limited public funding and deeply rooted caste ideologies still obstruct progress. However, the resilience of Mauritania’s marginalized populations provides a change model, with these grassroots efforts fostering a future where emancipation signifies freedom from chains and the opportunity to thrive.
– Emilia Bartle
Emilia is based in Watford, UK and focuses on Good News and Politics for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Flickr
Exercising in Gaza: The Man Inspiring People To Keep Fit
The Fitness Trend
Young people are increasingly prioritizing health and wellness. This year’s London Marathon broke records with 56,640 finishers. Gen Z is also drinking less and signing up for more gym memberships. Social media proves this trend, with a rise in fitness influencers sharing their workout routines, meal plans and physical transformations with millions of followers worldwide.
One of these influencers is Mohammed Hatem. He fits the mold in many ways: he’s 20, has more than 300,000 followers on Instagram and posts fitness videos online. But the difference is that he lives in Gaza.
The Journey
Hatem began documenting his fitness journey on Instagram as a displaced Palestinian in April 2024. An avid gym goer and bodybuilder before the war, he notes on his page that, since the conflict started in 2023, he hasn’t been able to access a gym or nourish himself properly, leading to losing much of his strength. Eventually, he grew “fed up [of] waiting for the war to end” to prioritize his physical health again. So he started posting videos of himself exercising in Gaza, detailing his workouts and meals.
More than a year later, Hatem has fled his home several times due to the widening “danger zone.” Despite this, he continues exercising in Gaza. He not only encourages his fellow Palestinians to keep fit with the little they have but also inspires people worldwide to confront their preconceptions and rethink what it means to live in a warzone.
Most of his videos share the innovative ways he keeps fit, including doing weighted press-ups with bricks in his backpack, using his door frame to do pull-ups and carrying large containers of water upstairs. However, he also details what he eats, mostly from a tin. Fresh food is scarce in Gaza and earlier this year, the U.N. warned that one in five people living there is at risk of starvation.
Hatem also posts informative videos on other aspects of his life besides exercising in Gaza. These include how he gets access to the internet, updates on ceasefires and his method of planting fruit and vegetables to supplement the food other nations send in aid.
Looking Ahead
In a recent video entitled “Pursuing Dreams in Gaza,” Hatem explains that he is hoping to build his dream physique and eat enough to gain muscle when the war is over. He also dreams of starting an online coaching business to help others, just as he does now through his Instagram account. Despite all adversity, he continues exercising, educating and inspiring. He provides hope to all those affected by war, poverty and displacement.
– Elsa Tarring
Photo: Unsplash
Indian Slums: Why People in India Won’t Be Slumming It Anymore
Three Makes a Pattern
The Delhi Development Authority (DDA), established to promote and construct large-scale affordable housing in Delhi, recently demolished Loni Road in northeast Delhi’s Gokalpuri locality. This marks a pattern, following two earlier demolitions of homes in areas such as Ashok Vihar, Wazirpur and Madrasi Camp. It demolished neighborhoods described as “illegally encroaching on government land,” like the Jailorwala Bagh JJ Cluster in Ashok Vihar on June 16.
Many slum structures were torn down, leaving many low-income wage workers displaced without a home. According to a piece in the Times of India, DDA did not inform the slum-dwellers about the demolitions. Another neighborhood in the DDA demolition list, Batla House, received some relief when residents approached the High Court. However, the public interest litigation filed by MLA Amanatullah Khan was dismissed. The petition argued that some targeted residents were not in the disputed zone.
The DDA initiated these demolition drives following High Court orders to resolve the flooding issues caused by the narrow drains that obstructed water flow during heavy rains.
Criticism and Future
U.N. experts have issued a warning to India to halt demolitions that disproportionately affect people living in poverty. Long-time residents of these areas are now forced to watch their homes being destroyed. According to the U.N. special rapporteur on the right to housing, India is leading the front in illegal home demolitions.
The U.N. experts, in their statement, pointed out that the demolitions are carried out without any investigation into the presence of these “illegal immigrants.” They added that concerns such as “national security” and motivations like the “anti-enforcement campaigns” are used to justify the actions. These “bulldozer drives” affect low-income household minorities and migrants who are not qualified for resettlement and cannot afford housing.
Dharavi, one of Asia’s largest slum clusters, is currently in the process of redevelopment, with its first list of slum households eligible for housing being released. Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on June 20 said that the Delhi government is considering studying Dharavi’s model for the redevelopment of 675 slum clusters in the national capital. Gupta asked the residents of Indian slums in Delhi to consider their safety and security when they build their homes near the railway line.
Innovation Amid Crisis
Being one of the fastest urbanizing countries in the world, India is estimated to have a huge growth in population. The U.N. has estimated a whopping 164 million addition to India’s population between 2015 and 2030 in urban areas.
Researchers are exploring ways to improve slum conditions amid India’s rapid urbanization. A scientific trial led by the Wellcome Trust-backed project is trying to solve the heat problem, especially as heat waves intensify every summer in places like Ahmedabad.
Roofs of Indian slums were painted with a reflective white coating to send the sun’s radiation back to the atmosphere. This one-year trial involving 400 households in Ahmedabad was started earlier this year and residents already see a difference in temperature and electricity bills.
Conclusion
Although steps are being taken, urban growth is outpacing the development of adequate housing, sanitation, clean water and waste management in many areas. The demolition drives are displacing poverty-stricken communities, depriving them of their means of livelihood, deepening divisions and violating human rights.
– Sahana Shastry
Photo: Flickr
How Togolese Athletes Rise Above Poverty To Reach the Olympics
Poverty in Togo
With more than half of the national population living below the poverty line, Togo continues to struggle with implementing development initiatives and programs designed to improve the daily lives of the Togolese people. Similarities between Togo and other poverty-ridden nations are prevalent, including domestic unrest, a growing hunger crisis and a lack of access to education. Children often live without the key elements of a thriving society, namely access to education and child care, putting them and all of Togo at risk for cyclical poverty.
Despite widespread poverty, many Togolese athletes manage to reach international levels of competition, overcoming significant economic obstacles along the way. While international athletics provides a world stage to share the talent and ideals of individual nations, it also creates a platform for building a shared community. The opportunity to participate increases hope and resilience among athletes.
However, in impoverished countries like Togo, athletes face inadequate training facilities and equipment, limited access to coaching and trainers, a lack of nutrition and low sponsorship amounts for international competitions, according to The Brookings Institution.
A Rower From Agbodrafo
Akoko Komlanvi, a Togolese single sculls rower, competed in the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, rising above a poverty-stricken upbringing to gain international recognition. As one of five Togolese athletes at the Games, her performance improved with support from the Olympic Solidarity scholarship program.
The Olympic Solidarity program supports skilled athletes from marginalized and impoverished nations. These athletes often lack access to professional training resources and cannot afford travel costs. Support from the program helps them attend the international competitions required to qualify for events like the World Championships and the Olympic Games, according to the International Olympic Committee.
Without the Olympic Solidarity program, athletes like Komlanvi, gifted but lacking equal access to training and opportunities, would be unable to compete or represent their countries on the global stage. The program gave Komlanvi the chance to train in Tunisia, where she had access to quality rowing equipment that is rare, if not nonexistent, in Togo. Despite finishing last, participating in the Olympics was a win for Komlanvi and her country.
Pros Outweigh the Cons of the Olympics
As each Olympic Games nears, debates commence about the negative impacts of the event, primarily on the host country. The host country typically incurs an economic burden due to decreased revenue and increased costs of improving stadiums or building new arenas and housing for athletes.
However, after each Olympic Games, the necessity of providing this opportunity for athletes worldwide to gather under different flags in a fair and peaceful environment is re-established. Nations that compete, like Togo, reaffirm the importance of the goal of being counted among the participating countries.
Bringing the Togolese People Together via Sport
Sports can improve the health and well-being of athletes and those they represent, especially those living in poverty, increasing social inclusion and shedding light on global issues. While international support programs are vital for professional athletes, domestic and amateur athletes also need resources to improve their health and lessen the impact of poverty. Many of these individuals, whose struggles are echoed by their country’s athletes on the world stage, still lack access to necessities like food, health care and education.
One such program, run by the Leading Youth, Sport and Development group, supports youth development by using basketball to foster peace and address pressing social issues in Togo. This agency helps implement and support programs that align with the 2030 Agenda. It’s committed to minimizing poverty and inequality worldwide through programs designed to influence younger generations to make lasting changes positively.
Final Remarks
Beyond health benefits, sports can reduce discrimination, boost social participation and create job opportunities and revenue streams. This makes athletic programs a valuable investment in the well-being of the Togolese people.
– Avery Kachmarsky
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
How Freed Communities Are Building Schools in Mauritania
Few enslavers have been prosecuted and the government denies that slavery still exists, instead targeting anti-slavery activists who challenge the system. Illiteracy, common among the Haratine, deepens their marginalization, with only half able to read and write. Public education in Mauritania is underfunded and neglected, failing those most in need, while the elite send their children to private schools.
Without birth certificates, many Haratine children are prevented from attending school, reinforcing their exclusion. Nonetheless, communities are establishing their schools in response to systemic neglect. Since 2014, more than 60 grassroots schools have been built by and for the Haratine, providing literacy and empowerment. These initiatives challenge a divided nation, where rural slavery contrasts with urban segregation and where the legacy of slavery persists in slums and segregated neighborhoods.
The Rise of Community-Led Schooling
Pervasive illiteracy and the emergence of community-led schools in Mauritania underscore both significant challenges and the resilient efforts of formerly marginalized communities to reclaim their right to education, a transformative journey from enslavement to education. Although there have been gradual improvements, stark disparities persist, exacerbated by a brain drain of young, educated Mauritanians seeking higher education abroad, leading to a fractured system.
Ali Deng of the Sahel Foundation notes that primary education is highly stratified: wealthy families send their children to elite private schools, the middle class chooses lower-tier private institutions and the impoverished rely on underfunded government schools with few resources. Rural areas are hit hardest, with severe teacher shortages making access nearly impossible. With literacy rates as low as 52% and extreme poverty impacting three-quarters of the population, grassroots organizations have stepped in to fill the gap.
Groups like Graines d’Espoir Mauritania work directly with marginalized communities, offering educational support, nutrition and agricultural programs to promote long-term development. These efforts, often led by residents and supported by diaspora networks, focus on inclusive education, rejecting ethnic or religious discrimination. While the government is gradually expanding access, NGOs and community-led schools in Mauritania enable oppressed groups, such as the Haratin, to overcome systemic barriers and create their routes to literacy and empowerment.
Political Pushback and Progress
Despite Mauritania’s official abolition of slavery in 1981 and subsequent laws against it, the practice continues with alarming impunity. Those advocating for emancipation face relentless political repression. Leading this effort is Biram Dah Abeid, an anti-slavery activist and politician who established the Initiative for the Resurgence of the Abolitionist Movement (IRA-Mauritania).
Abeid is globally recognized for his bravery, receiving awards like the 2013 U.N. Human Rights Prize, the 2016 U.S. State Department’s TIP Hero Award and the 2015 Dutch Human Rights Tulip. Abeid works to free enslaved communities, prosecute slaveholders and challenge the government’s complicity. His activism has come at a personal cost. In 2014, he and 16 fellow activists were arrested during a protest against slaveholder impunity. He was charged with unlawful assembly and sentenced to two years in prison amid international protests.
Although released in 2016, he was re-arrested in 2018, highlighting the government’s effort to silence dissent. Nonetheless, IRA-Mauritania continues grassroots activism through protests, hunger strikes and global advocacy. These suppression tactics reflect a wider pattern of resistance against Black liberation movements, where legal and political systems are weaponized to uphold oppression. Yet, Abedi’s perseverance and international support show that liberated communities are demanding education and justice and redefining resistance narratives amid systemic violence.
The Lasting Effects
In Mauritania, community-led educational and economic programs are transforming freed slave communities by breaking cycles of oppression and reshaping cultural narratives. Organizations like Anti-Slavery International and SOS-Esclaves have supported formerly enslaved individuals, especially Haratine women. They do this through vocational training, financial literacy workshops and small business support, helping hundreds achieve economic independence for the first time.
These initiatives do more than foster livelihoods; they challenge caste hierarchies by promoting self-worth and empowerment. Personal stories, such as Moctar’s, who escaped slavery at age 13 and now aims to become a lawyer, illustrate the psychological freedom these efforts provide. His mother’s initial resistance, rooted in long standing beliefs about caste superiority, highlights the cultural barriers these programs face.
By teaching skills like embroidery, sewing and market entrepreneurship, these workshops offer income opportunities and reshape social roles for Haratines, historically limited to “dirty” or “degrading” work. These community-driven initiatives demonstrate how they can address immediate survival needs while fostering long-term cultural change, turning emancipation into genuine empowerment.
A Path Forward Through Collective Action
Mauritania’s transition from enslavement to education highlights both the persistence of systemic oppression and the empowering role of community-led resistance. Although slavery has been legally abolished, hereditary slavery continues under caste hierarchies, government denial and institutional neglect. Nonetheless, freed communities, especially the Haratine, are creating spaces for empowerment through grassroots schools, vocational programs and economic initiatives in Mauritania.
The growth of community-based schooling, supported by groups like Anti-Slavery International and activists such as Abeid, shows how education can break the cycle of intergenerational trauma. These successes, though hard-won, reveal the contradictions within a state that bans slavery but criminalizes those fighting against it.
The path forward remains challenging. Repressive government actions limited public funding and deeply rooted caste ideologies still obstruct progress. However, the resilience of Mauritania’s marginalized populations provides a change model, with these grassroots efforts fostering a future where emancipation signifies freedom from chains and the opportunity to thrive.
– Emilia Bartle
Photo: Flickr
Clearing Invasive Water Weeds in Senegal Fights Disease
Schistosomiasis: A Barrier to Health and Economic Growth
This initiative targets schistosomiasis, a parasitic infection spread by snails that inhabit stagnant water. The disease affects more than 200 million people globally, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. Infected individuals, especially children, suffer from fatigue, stunted growth and organ damage, which limit both education and income-generating potential. Senegal’s Saint-Louis region has long been a hotspot for the disease.
However, rather than relying solely on drug treatments, researchers from Cornell University and the University of Notre Dame partnered with eight Senegalese villages to try a local intervention: vegetation removal. Over three years, communities cleared more than 400 tons of invasive aquatic weeds from rivers, lakes and irrigation points. Within months, snail populations dropped by and schistosomiasis infections among children declined significantly.
Composting Waste Into Agricultural Wealth
The removed invasive weeds were composted and used to fertilize local crops such as onions, peppers and rice. Farmers who used the compost reported better soil quality, larger harvests and reduced need for synthetic fertilizers. As Molly Doruska, lead author of the study, explained, “This is about really thinking hard about the microeconomics in the cycle of poverty and disease, really thinking hard about households making decisions and the tradeoffs that they’re facing.”
Researchers developed a bioeconomic model to estimate the long-term impact of the intervention. The results were promising: communities that participated in vegetation removal and composting saw improved household incomes and lower rates of schistosomiasis. The low cost of implementation, using only machetes, baskets and compost pits, makes it both scalable and sustainable.
Environmental and Gender Benefits
The strategy yields environmental wins as well. Clearing invasive water weeds in Senegal helps restore freshwater ecosystems, reduces erosion and improves access to water. The composted material replaces chemical fertilizers, cutting input costs and supporting soil health. The approach also has significant gender implications. In many rural households, women are primarily responsible for water collection and caregiving. With fewer children getting sick, women could have more time for farming, education or income-generating activities.
Beyond physical health, the intervention contributes to long-term social development. Reduced infection rates mean more children can attend school regularly without suffering from the fatigue or pain associated with schistosomiasis. In addition, the project has sparked environmental awareness. In participating communities, residents now better understand the link between environmental care and health outcomes and many have begun to self-organize cleanup efforts.
Scalability Across the Continent
Experts believe this “win-win-win” model could be replicated across other parts of sub-Saharan Africa where schistosomiasis and aquatic vegetation are prevalent. Since the required tools are simple and the work is labor-based, it can be easily adapted to local conditions. It also aligns with several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including No Poverty, Good Health and Well-being, Gender Equality and Life on Land.
Clearing invasive water weeds in Senegal has proven that locally driven, low-cost interventions can have wide-reaching benefits. By removing harmful plants and turning them into a resource, communities reduce disease and invest in their economic futures. In the global fight against poverty, sometimes the most effective tools are machetes, compost piles and a little teamwork.
– Mamie Hirsh
Photo: Flickr
A Brief Overview of Disability and Poverty in Angola
Background
In the 1970s, Angola fought a war of independence against Portuguese colonial rule, followed by a prolonged civil war between rival political factions until 2002. This extended period of conflict left behind a large population of disabled individuals and severely damaged the country’s infrastructure and potential for economic development.
As of 2018, approximately 53% of Angola’s population earns less than $3.65 daily. The majority of this vulnerable population resides in rural areas, which, incidentally, were also the most heavily impacted by military action during the Civil War period. The land still bears marks of physical destruction, including destroyed infrastructure and other dangers affecting the population.
The presence of unexploded ordnances such as landmines is of particular concern: between 60,000 and 88,000 Angolans have been injured by landmines. However, the number is likely higher due to underreporting. Reports suggest that there are as many as 1,000 minefields left in Angola. Given the lack of reliable data and access to survivors, it is even more challenging to ascertain the extent of war-related psychological disabilities, such as PTSD.
At the same time, compensation is practically nonexistent: military veterans are entitled to pensions equivalent to $67 per month. However, even this relatively minor payment is only issued to a small percentage of eligible recipients. The Angolan government has similarly failed to deliver housing and infrastructure development promises.
Addressing the Problems
International organizations and aid groups have worked to alleviate problems relating to disability and poverty in Angola. The HALO Trust, a British charity that works to clear away explosives in former conflict areas, has been active in Angola since 1994. It reported eliminating 123,000 landmines as of 2025.
These efforts have helped restore access to farmland, schools and roads, reducing injury risks and improving livelihoods, especially for communities where landmine-related disabilities remain common. HALO’s work also supports Angola’s broader goals of rural development, poverty reduction and rehabilitation for those injured during the conflict.
Mine clearing operations are directly connected to infrastructure work. For example, it would permit the development of the so-called Lobito Corridor, a railway project linking the resource-rich African interior to the Angolan port of Lobito, facilitating mineral exports and providing economic opportunities for Angolans.
Conclusion
Disability and poverty in Angola go hand in hand. Clearing landmines would not only reduce injuries and disabilities but also support rebuilding efforts. These advances may help to restore economic productivity across the country. At the same time, greater involvement from authorities, particularly toward investing in issues that originate from the war’s legacy, will help improve the life quality of Angolans.
– Rafael Saavedra
Photo: Flickr
How Liberian Women Are Closing the Maternal Health Gap
Through decentralized networks of midwives, traditional birth attendants (TBAs) and grassroots advocates, they fill the gaps left by a fractured health system. Backed by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) such as Last Mile Health, CARE Liberia and Mercy Ships, these women are lowering maternal mortality rates while challenging gender and political obstacles. Their approach, based on trust and cultural understanding, serves as a worldwide model for recovery in post-conflict settings.
Grassroots Networks: Midwives and TBAs on the Frontlines
In rural Liberia, where 44% of women deliver at home without skilled assistance, community health workers (CHWs) and TBAs are crucial. Initiatives like Last Mile Health have trained thousands of CHWs to provide prenatal care, make emergency referrals and treat malaria, reaching more than one million people in remote areas. Meanwhile, TBAs, often the only providers in villages, now collaborate with clinics through programs that combine traditional knowledge with medical training.
The Liberia Midwifery Program, supported by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Development Fund (UNFPA), has expanded rural midwifery schools. The project achieved this, though shortages remain, with fewer than 200 midwives serving four million people. “We need midwives who can ensure safe pregnancies before conception,” Bentoe Tehoungue of the Liberian health ministry says. These efforts yield results: maternal mortality has decreased by 64% since 2000, demonstrating the impact of community-driven care.
Women’s Advocacy
Liberian women are closing the maternal health gap as they are not merely caregivers but also policymakers. Female-led local health committees actively lobby for improved clinics and higher midwife salaries. CARE Liberia supports these efforts through its Women’s Voice and Leadership program, which trains women to hold health budgets accountable.
Although patriarchal resistance is still strong, signs of progress are evident. For instance, in 2019, the Liberian Board for Nursing and Midwifery updated its curriculum to emphasise midwives’ roles as leaders, not just service providers. These changes illustrate a broader pattern: when women spearhead recovery efforts, the solutions tend to be more sustainable.
NGO Partnerships: Scaling Local Solutions
International allies offer vital support without replacing local expertise. Mercy Ships, active in Liberia since 2005, trains surgeons and donates equipment to tackle obstetric emergencies such as fistulas. Meanwhile, Last Mile Health helped establish Liberia’s National Community Health Program in 2016, which has become a global model for CHW systems. Challenges remain with USAID funding cuts straining services, but Liberian women maintain resilience.
Looking Forward
Liberia’s maternal health crisis persists, but women are closing the maternal health gap and have demonstrated that community trust can outperform top-down solutions. By blending traditional knowledge with modern health care, pushing for policy reforms and forming NGO collaborations, they save lives and reshape health care leadership. Their approach offers valuable lessons for societies recovering from crises: lasting change starts with those who understand the needs most.
– Emilia Bartle
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Ending Child Marriage in Madagascar
Archaic gender norms and inequalities have been around for centuries. These inequalities still permeate Madagascan culture, leaving young girls under 18 vulnerable to fall victim to child marriages. In 2020, the total number of girls married before the age of 18 was a staggering 12 million per year.
It is often the context in developing countries like Madagascar that others see girls as women as soon as they begin menstruating, so can begin their duties as a mother and a wife with immediacy. However, girls can start their period as young as 8 years old, at an age where their brain is not even one-third developed yet.
Who Is Vulnerable?
Girls facing extreme levels of poverty are the most susceptible to child marriage in Madagascar. Nearly 40% of girls in the world’s poorest countries are victims of child marriages; this is twice the global average. This is because impoverished families see marriage – particularly to a wealthier man – as a way to achieve financial security. Poorer regions, such as Toliara, show the highest rates of child marriage in Madagascar. In Toliara, 69% of girls marry before the age of 18.
Low access to education also assists the prevalence of the child marriage route. If getting a substantial education is not feasible for girls in a developing country, families will see marriage for income as their only option. It is often the case that parents will invest in the education of their sons over their daughters if they have limited resources; this choice leaves girls vulnerable to falling victim to their families using them as a commodity in a child marriage.
Solutions To End Child Marriage in Madagascar
Charities like UNICEF and UNFPA are helping in the fight to end child marriage in Madagascar. Despite the introduction of the Law on Marriage and Matrimonial Regimes in 2007 – which sets the minimum age for marriage at 18 for both girls and boys – child marriage practices are still in place in Madagascan communities. Examples of this include “moletry,” which is the marriage of a young girl to an older man for the payment of money to the child’s family, and “tsenan’ampela,” an active girls’ market for prostitution.
However, there is still hope. The Madagascan government has committed to eliminate child marriage by 2030. The United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 5.3 lays this out – to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls. Tools that are undergoing development with UNICEF to implement the national strategy include orienting government officials at a regional level, to guide local authorities in developing and implementing action to eliminate child marriage.
The Life Skills Framework
The Life Skills Framework – which focuses on self-awareness skills and community living – was implemented in several Madagascan communes with above average child marriage rates in the early 2020s. UNICEF is making efforts to prioritize the most vulnerable children and families, such as those in poverty with daughters susceptible to falling victim to an arranged marriage. This program explores topics such as the risk of child marriage, the challenges of young parenting and protecting oneself against violence and exploitation. There is a heavy focus on the rights of the child and the illegality of child marriage in the current day.
The implementation of the program long-term may pose an issue, as UNICEF is directly injecting funds instead of the government. It is simply not economically viable for the Madagascan government to prioritize child protection over all else. Nonetheless, this program has been largely successful in its implementation thus far. Men and boys learn about positive masculinity and the effect of the patriarchy on young girls, which would be an otherwise foreign topic to them. Between January 2020 and February 2021, the program reached almost 10,000 children across Madagascar, and from 2021 to 2024, child marriage rates have dropped from 38.8% to 32.4%. However, without funding, this program will have difficulty reaching all of the communities that it should.
Looking Ahead
Child marriage in developing countries is as pervasive an issue today as it has been for centuries. However, the statistics show that the rate of child marriage in nations like Madagascar is steadily decreasing. If initiatives like the Life Skills Framework receive support from communities and governments, the fight to end child marriage can be won.
– Sarina Maloy
Photo: Unsplash
Medical Aid in Jordan Receive Major Upgrades
Beyond the direct health toll of COVID-19, which continues to affect the population, Jordan experienced a significant economic downturn during the pandemic. While tourism is not the country’s primary source of revenue, widespread closures of restaurants and local businesses highlighted the pandemic’s broader economic impact. Reduced consumer activity and a sharp decline in domestic and international visitors contributed to revenue losses across multiple sectors.
As a result, poverty levels in Jordan rose during and after the pandemic. According to the World Bank, 15.7% of the population now lives at or below the national poverty line. In comparison, the poverty rate stood at 14.4% in 2010, reflecting a marginal but notable increase over the past decade.
Medical Tourism in Jordan
Beyond its reputation for agriculture and natural beauty, Jordan is also widely recognized for its health care system. It ranks first in the Middle East for health services due to its well-regarded Western‑educated physicians and advanced medical facilities.
Medical tourism is a significant pillar of Jordan’s economy, generating more than $1 billion in revenue annually. It accounts for approximately 4% of the nation’s GDP. The sector has also created jobs for thousands of Jordanians, especially medical professionals.
Medical Aid Centers in Jordan
Medical aid centers in Jordan have increased recently, with the government upgrading six regional medical warehouses in Irbid, Jordan. According to Firas Hawari, the Health Minister of Jordan, “the new warehouses and vaccination center are part of broader efforts to modernize Jordan’s health care infrastructure, ensuring the efficient and equitable distribution of medicines and vaccines.”
The aim of upgrading Jordan’s medical warehouses is to improve access to efficient, high-quality health care services for medical professionals and the public. These upgrades focus on expanding storage capacity for essential supplies, such as vaccines, medications and medical equipment, thereby enabling streamlined distribution across health care facilities in the country.
Following the successful upgrade of the medical warehouse in Irbid, Jordan extended similar improvements to four additional facilities in Ma’an. Jordan implemented the upgrades through a partnership between the Jordanian Ministry of Health, the European Union (EU) and the WHO, further reinforcing the country’s robust health care system.
Jordan’s broader objective is to achieve universal health care coverage for its citizens and everyone else residing within its borders. To support this goal, the government allocated an estimated 850,000 Jordanian dinars (approximately $1.2 million) for the recent upgrade of its medical warehouses. These infrastructure improvements were completed by the end of March 2025, a key step in strengthening the country’s health care delivery system.
Looking Ahead
The expansion of warehouse upgrades across the country is expected to enhance health care delivery significantly. By increasing storage and distribution capacity, Jordan aims to ensure more affordable and accessible health care services. Furthermore, the upgrades are particularly for vulnerable populations, including refugees and citizens who depend on regular access to medication.
– Erin Lee
Photo: Flickr
Addressing Disability and Poverty in Kazakhstan
The official report shows that 5.3% of Kazakhstan’s population is below the poverty line, though it is estimated that almost 50% of the nation survives just above the poverty line. Additionally, it shows that about 750,000 people are living with a disability in Kazakhstan, which includes 101,000 who are children under 18 years old. As of 2022, there were about 36,000 new cases of cancer, whereas 0.4% experienced blindness as of 2025 and about 150,000 people had hearing or hearing-related impairments.
Human Rights Watch: Holding Kazakhstan Accountable
A recent that the Human Rights Watch did looked into the condition of poverty and disability in Kazakhstan, particularly the role of Targeted Social Assistance (TSA). TSA is a state-led program that Kazakhstan implemented in 2001, which aims to give financial assistance to individuals and families with a monthly average per capita income below the poverty line. However, findings determined there were significant hitches to the TSA program.
TSA, which serves almost 1 million citizens of Kazakhstan, is designed to provide financial aid to the nation’s poor and disabled people through monthly payments and they have opened social centers which provide legal and financial services as well as free training programs. However, the 2022 study reported that there have been problems with widespread stigma for people with disabilities who seek aid from TSA, a lack of education (especially in rural areas) regarding the opportunities for TSA benefits and an application system that makes it hard to sign up.
“A relatively prosperous country such as Kazakhstan should be able to step up and meet its human rights obligations to ensure that everyone has access to social security that offers an adequate standard of living,” Hugh Williamson, the Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch said. “At present, meager payments, bureaucratic hurdles, and stigma mean this is not happening.”
Stigma and Discrimination
Another recent study, a research study called “Disability, Livelihood and Poverty in Asia and the Pacific,” by the ESCAP Social Development Division, under the overall direction of Nanda Krairiksh, which included Kazakhstan among eight other countries, showed Kazakhstan doing favorably in comparison to countries like Fiji and the Republic of Korea. However, the study also highlighted that there are low numbers of people struggling with disability and poverty in Kazakhstan attending public or even private schools. According to a 72-page report entitled “On the Margins:” Education for Children with Disabilities in Kazakhstan” published in 2019, the education system segregates and isolates children with disabilities, teach children in separate classrooms, when they can make it to school and their closed psychiatric institutions receive very little or no education.
The ESCAP study generally showed that poverty in different countries often leads to disability and disability often leads to poverty, a compounding problem, and that access to social security benefits and gainful employment, when possible, is the key to stability—39% of people with disabilities are employed in Kazakhstan, with most of the people working in the research sector. Beyond that, “Policy should not only build and expand on the resources and opportunities that persons with disabilities have, but also remove the barriers that they face, including stigma and discrimination,” a rife issue that the Human Rights Watch found with Kazakhstan’s TSA program and society in general.
Solutions
There are those in Kazakhstan who are trying to use their experience with poverty and disability to better the conditions in the country for others in the same circumstances. Two such champions are Zhannat Yessmaganbetova, who lives in the western city Atyrau, and Roza Akzharkenova, who lives in the southeast. Zhannat, who considers that her own disability created the patience and fortitude to make her the perfect advocate, has been addressing issues like urban infrastructure and social space, dealing with details like access to state facilities by means of ramps, lifts and appropriate places for consultation. Roza is addressing the same issues in her region of Kazakhstan and also advocating for more research into a situation that she believes is more widespread and urgent than most people believe.
The way advocates like Roza and Zhannat come at the issue from several directions in an effort to make social security programs like TSA more accommodating and accessible for people who struggle with disability and poverty in Kazakhstan, seem to be Kazakhstan’s road to keeping up with developed countries. Kazakhstan is catching up with modern expectations for how to deal with poverty and disability, after years of having almost no systematic research or international accountability. Studies by the likes of the Human Rights Watch and ESCAP, as well as figures like Zhannat Yessmaganbetova and Roza Akzkarkenova, have attempted to better the conditions for those dealing with disability and poverty in Kazakhstan.
– Gregory Walker
Photo: Flickr