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Archive for category: Global Poverty

Key articles and information on global poverty.

Global Health, Global Poverty, HIV/AIDS

The Fight Against HIV in Suriname

hiv surinameWith a population of just 640,000, Suriname is both the least populated nation on the continent and the smallest in size. Despite its modest scale, Suriname stands out as a constitutional democracy where Christianity remains the dominant faith. Although it rarely makes international headlines, the country deserves attention, not only for its rich cultural diversity but also for the pressing challenges its people continue to face, for example, the fight against HIV in Suriname.

The Prevalence of HIV

The prevalence of HIV is pretty high, estimating for almost 8,000 people per year, most of them being adults. Men are at a higher risk of this disease. In Suriname, the lack of up-to-date and detailed data on HIV prevalence continues to hinder effective policymaking. To address this, international support helped strengthen national statistics offices across the region, improving data collection and reporting.

However, economic challenges such as currency devaluation and inflation have led to major cuts in health spending, resulting in frequent shortages of antiretroviral treatment. Experts emphasize the need for renewed advocacy and updated investment cases to ensure the sustainability of HIV services.

Key Groups in the Fight Against HIV in Suriname

In Suriname, NGOs play a central role in HIV prevention among sex workers and men who have sex with men. Their outreach includes individual counseling, group education sessions, condom and lubricant distribution, and referrals to health services. For sex workers in gold mining areas, prevention efforts are integrated with malaria programs. These initiatives have shown clear success.

HIV prevalence among sex workers in Paramaribo dropped significantly, from 24.1% in 2005 to 5.8% in 2012. Most sex workers now demonstrate strong awareness of HIV prevention (96.5%), high rates of testing (82.7%), and frequent condom use (90%), according to the UNAIDS report. Still, challenges remain, particularly with consistent and correct condom use. The prevalence among sex workers remains higher than in the general population, highlighting the need for ongoing targeted interventions.

The Link Between Poverty and HIV in Suriname

The fight against HIV in Suriname cannot be separated from the country’s broader social and economic challenges. More than 17% of the population lives in poverty, while 1.1% survives in extreme poverty. Poverty is especially pronounced among households with children and in the center of the country, living much below the average poverty line. These economic hardships could directly affect the national HIV struggles. Limited household resources often mean reduced access to health care, HIV testing, and consistent treatment. What is more,  women—despite outperforming men in education—remain underrepresented in the workplaces, leaving them economically vulnerable and at greater risk of health inequities.

Fighting the Disease

Suriname has made significant progress in the fight against HIV, with support from the Global Fund and local civil society organizations. Today, 83% of diagnosed individuals are receiving antiretroviral treatment, and 90% of them have achieved viral suppression — a major step toward the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets.

As international donor funding gradually phases out, Suriname faces the critical challenge of sustaining these achievements domestically. The country’s Sustainability Action Plan for 2021–2024 makes strategies to maintain HIV prevention and treatment services, expand local funding and continue prioritizing key populations. With sustained commitment and focused action, the fight against HIV in Suriname can continue to yield progress and bring the country closer to ending the epidemic.

– Julia Skowrońska

Julia is based in Wrocław, Poland and focuses on Global Health for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 6, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Naida Jahic https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Naida Jahic2025-08-06 03:00:292025-08-06 03:36:40The Fight Against HIV in Suriname
Global Poverty, Nonprofit Organizations and NGOs, Water

3 Innovative Ways NGOs Reduce Water Scarcity in Rural Africa

Water Scarcity in Rural AfricaA lack of clean, sustainable and accessible water resources has plagued rural Africa for a long time. More than half of the population in rural Africa lacks access to safe drinking water. Beyond the immediate concerns, water scarcity creates numerous other problems. Collecting water can become a timely cost and the burden usually falls on the women in the house.

This reduces the economic stability of families across the continent and contributes to poverty rates. Additionally, it creates a dependence on contaminated water, which leads to increased rates of cholera and dysentery internationally. The rural community in Africa is suffering under the threat of scarce water supply. However, various organizations are getting creative in reducing water scarcity in rural Africa. They dream that one day, clean water will be the standard.

Fog Nets: Harvesting Water From the Air

Fog Nets are essentially, multilayered nets that harvest moisture from the air where fog is present but water is not. Popular especially in mountain ranges, it provides a consistent flow of clean water for nearby inhabitants. While the nets alone cannot sustain a population, they contribute significantly.

These fog nets provide 1,000 liters of water daily to arid sections of Africa. Originating in the Atacama Desert in Chile, this fabric creates a sustainable and clean alternative to disease-infested waters. This creative technology is reducing water scarcity in rural Africa every day and several NGOs hope to install it as a long-term solution for citizens across Africa.

Water ATMs: Creating Access To Clean Water

The concept of a Water-ATM is being tested across two African villages. Essentially, these ATMs are access points at which surrounding villages can purchase verified clean water through a metered system. It would simultaneously reduce the distance necessary to attain water and ensure its cleanliness.

Vendors seem extremely eager to enter the business, charging customers through a metered system that would remain affordable. These machines are accessible by pre-paid cards, allowing individuals to pour the water into their basins and transport it a few kilometers back to their homes, instead of taking hours. This solution is slowly helping to reduce water scarcity in rural Africa. However, with the necessary financial support, it has the potential to save lives and transform communities across rural Africa.

Play-Powered Water Access

In 2009, two companies, NOV Mono and Water For All, began working to reduce water scarcity in rural Africa by launching an initiative in Johannesburg, South Africa. Together, they introduced the “Fun Pump,” a water system that combines a solar-powered electric pump with a merry-go-round structure for children to play on.

Not only is this structure bringing clean water to these rural communities, but it’s also bringing joy. Modern play structures like these are few and far between, so kids are enthused to play on them, powering the water initiative for the surrounding villages.

Looking Forward

It’s no secret that water scarcity is a growing problem in Africa. People spend hours every day trekking to bring contaminated water to their homes. However, initiatives like the fun pump, water ATM and fog nets create clean, accessible and sustainable water sources across rural Africa.

– Caroline May

Caroline is based in Denver, CO, USA and focuses on Good News and Technology for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 6, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Lynsey 2 https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Lynsey 22025-08-06 01:30:312025-08-05 09:44:433 Innovative Ways NGOs Reduce Water Scarcity in Rural Africa
Electricity and Power, Global Poverty

Morocco’s Noor Solar Project: Redefining Renewable Growth

Noor Solar ProjectThe Noor Ouarzazate Solar Complex project in Morocco stands as a blueprint for sustainable innovation and alternative energy resources internationally. Set against the arid backdrop of the Sahara’s gateway, this solar giant does more than generate energy, but is building a model for clean development that blends technology, climate action and economic growth.

A Solar Vision for Change

Launched in stages beginning in 2016, the Noor solar project has rapidly grown into the world’s largest concentrated solar power (CSP) facility, with a generation capacity of more than 580 megawatts. The complex currently provides electricity to more than 1.1 million Moroccans and offsets approximately 690,000 tons of CO₂ emissions annually, which equates to removing more than 145,000 constantly running vehicles from the road.

The project was born out of a critical energy need. In 2019, Morocco depended on imports for more than 97% of its energy demand, with the government strategically turning to the locally available, renewable source to secure its energy security. This national strategy for Moroccan energy has big aims, hoping  to raise renewable energy to 52% of capacity by 2030, the World Bank reports. Noor, the crown jewel of this strategy, is delivering on that promise.

Clean Energy with Storage Capacity

The technology developed in the Noor solar project also represents a leap forward for renewable sources and alternative energy usage. Unlike traditional solar panels, the Noor plant uses curved mirrors to concentrate sunlight and heat a fluid, either synthetic oil or molten salt. This allows storing energy captured from the sun up to eight hours after sunset, something not possible with regular solar technology. This capacity to deliver electricity after dark is vital for matching peak demand, and it sets CSP apart from most other renewable systems.

Noor I, II, and III use a mix of trough and tower-based CSP designs, and each component of the project contributes significantly to Morocco’s grid. Noor I alone produces 370 GWh per year, while Noor II and III add another 1,100 GWh combined, according to King’s College London. This amount of energy is enough to power all of Marrakesh, a city of more than a million people, highlighting the local impact the energy generated by the project has made.

From Local Jobs to Global Impact

Development of the Noor solar project additionally supported local development, creating thousands of jobs during the construction process, and although long-term employment at the site is limited, secondary benefits have been longstanding. New roads and water infrastructure have allowed surrounding villages to become better linked to public services, with local farmers additionally receiving sustainable agriculture training from the Moroccan Agency for Sustainable Energy (MASEN).

Crucially, the project has attracted $1.6 billion in concessional financing from the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the European Union. This blend of public-private support signals what is possible when long-term environmental goals align with innovative development in the renewable energy sector.

Facing Environmental Trade-Offs

Despite its success, the Noor project does raise concerns, with the plant consuming a significant amount of water in the very dry and already water-scarce arid region. However, dry-cooling systems and air-based mirror cleaning are helping to lower usage, attempting to ensure the plant would remain functional in water shortages. Environmental studies have also flagged habitat loss and disruptions to native ecosystems, underscoring the importance of integrated sustainability planning in large-scale infrastructure.

Still, for many, the trade-offs are worth it. Noor represents more than just a solar farm, it is a pivot toward energy independence and a vision for exporting clean energy beyond Africa. As Morocco eyes future CSP developments in Midelt, Boujdour and Laayoune, the Noor Complex offers a promising path forward.

Looking Ahead

As global energy demand continues to rise, especially across Africa, Noor is proving that utility-scale renewables are viable. With a stable policy environment, strategic public-private investment and cutting-edge technology, Morocco is highlighting how developing nations can leap forward economically with sustainable practices.

– Thomas Finighan

Thomas is based in London, UK and focuses on Business and for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 6, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Naida Jahic https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Naida Jahic2025-08-06 01:30:302025-08-05 09:40:38Morocco’s Noor Solar Project: Redefining Renewable Growth
Economy, Entrepreneurship and Business, Global Poverty

China’s Taobao Villages are Fighting Poverty through E-Commerce

taobao villagesAlibaba coined the term Taobao Village to describe villages where at least 10% of households engage in e-commerce and have online sales of at least 10 million Yuan, or $1.5 million. These villages represent a bottom-up transformation in rural China, where residents have built thriving digital enterprises that have led to the development and reduced the number of the country’s population living in poverty. What began as an informal commerce strategy quickly grew into a national phenomenon, reshaping rural economies and changing the lives of villagers. As China continues to modernize, Taobao Villages highlight how digital innovation can reduce poverty, empower marginalized groups and generate long-term economic growth.

The Rise of Taobao Villages

The first Taobao Village can be traced back to Dongfeng village in Shaji, located in Jiangsu province. With a small population of about 50,000 people, it was the first rural village to take up e-commerce on a large scale. In 2010, while researching e-commerce and the villages, Alibaba’s team was surprised to see strong e-commerce activity in the town, which emerged organically through local grassroots initiative, according to Harvard University Asia Center.

It all started with one entrepreneur, a Shaji native, who opened the first online Taobao shop in 2006, first reselling mobile phone accessories and then expanding into the furniture business. Inspired by his success, other villages opened their own e-commerce stores, expanding the network as the Taobao Villages came to life.

Seeing how e-commerce slowly allowed locals to build their businesses, Alibaba created the Taobao platform, which provided opportunities for small and newer firms to sell products and services online. Taking no cuts from online transactions and demanding no fees from the opening of online stores, the platform diffused across the country, having a transformative effect in rural China.

Taobao Villages formed in three main stages:

  1. Grassroots development, as villagers led the establishment of local businesses;
  2. Government support through the expansion of local infrastructure and e-commerce training;
  3. Further government support through subsidies for service providers and firms.

Transforming Rural Economies

With reduced entry barriers, e-commerce is an accessible means of work and income for residents with minimal capital. This has led to more inclusive economic growth in rural areas of the country, especially Western and Central China, as financial conditions improved through the creation of more jobs and the general development of the economy.

The abundance of technology platforms and collaboration among villagers is changing the lives of millions of Chinese citizens. World Bank studies show that household incomes in Taobao Villages are close to three times the average rural household income, according to Alizila. Higher income leads to higher consumption, exacerbating the need for more service and goods providers, leading to a better job market and reduced income inequality.

The Result

Often perceived as a phenomenon of high-income countries, China’s e-commerce development has shown that high levels of development are not required for a successful transition from physical to digital commerce. With a worldwide commerce transaction value that exceeds that of France, Japan, Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom combined, China proves its commitment to development and the fight against poverty.

Taobao Villages became part of a grander national strategy to fight poverty, with the State Council Office on Poverty Alleviation releasing guidelines on the expansion of e-commerce in rural areas as an essential step in November 2016. In 2021, China achieved the United Nations’ 2030 poverty reduction goals in the Agenda for Sustainable Development. In the past forty years, it has lifted more than 800 million people out of extreme poverty.

Conclusion

While more research on the topic is necessary to clarify the relationship between the dominance of e-commerce in villages and welfare improvement, many cases show that people in Taobao Villages lead better lives. Lowering the required skill threshold, digital technologies can allow less-skilled and less-educated individuals to participate in e-commerce and achieve higher living standards.

For e-commerce to help alleviate poverty, the government should develop infrastructure and offer logistical support, creating a conducive environment for change. Subsidies and workshops are additional ways in which the government can contribute to the development of e-commerce platforms and combat poverty.

– Rafaela Paquet

Rafaela is based in Montreal, Canada and focuses on Business and Technology for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 5, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Naida Jahic https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Naida Jahic2025-08-05 07:30:352025-08-05 04:17:45China’s Taobao Villages are Fighting Poverty through E-Commerce
Disease, Global Poverty, Health

Schistosomiasis in Angola: A Local Strategy With Global Impact

Schistosomiasis in Angola: A Local Strategy With Global ImpactSchistosomiasis in Angola continues to pose a major threat to public health- especially for school-aged children in rural, water-reliant communities. Caused by parasitic worms that infect humans through contact with contaminated freshwater, schistosomiasis can lead to fatigue, anemia and developmental delays. With more than 90% of districts at risk, Angola faces one of the highest burdens of this neglected tropical disease (NTD) in sub-Saharan Africa.

To combat this issue, Angola’s Ministry of Health, backed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) such as The MENTOR Initiative, has implemented an innovative, school-based response. These campaigns provide mass deworming treatments using praziquantel, reinforce hygiene education and promote access to clean water and sanitation. This integrative model not only lowers infection rates but also improves school attendance and overall child development.

Understanding the Disease Burden

“Children are especially vulnerable as they play in the water and often don’t understand the risks,” a local health worker based in the Huila, Huambo and Zaire provinces told The Borgen Project in an interview. “We saw many children with swollen bellies and constant fatigue. Now, after regular deworming and hygiene education, those symptoms are much less common.”

Schistosomiasis in Angola has long plagued rural Angola, where many communities depend on rivers and lakes for everyday activities such as bathing, washing and even drinking. According to WHO, chronic schistosomiasis can lead to liver and kidney damage, cognitive delays and an increased risk of school absenteeism. Recent mapping by The MENTOR Initiative reveals a troubling overlap between schistosomiasis and other parasitic infections like soil-transmitted helminths (STHs). This dual burden is particularly pronounced in Angola’s south-central provinces, where more than 70% of school-aged children are at risk.

School-Based Campaigns: A Scalable Solution

Angola’s Ministry of Health, in collaboration with WHO, has responded with mass deworming campaigns centered around schools. “We coordinate with teachers and school staff,” the health worker explained. “They help us organize the children and explain the treatment to them in simple terms.” Parents are also engaged through community meetings, which help build trust and transparency around the medication process. These campaigns utilize praziquantel, the WHO-recommended drug for schistosomiasis treatment. In addition to being safe and affordable, praziquantel is effective with a single dose and is ideally suited for distribution in school settings.

According to a six‑year impact assessment of Angola’s school‑based deworming program, schistosomiasis monitoring covered nearly 600 schools between 2015 and 2021, revealing persistent transmission in multiple provinces. As a result, soil-transmitted helminth-endemic regions received deworming treatments, hygiene supplies and health education. These combined efforts have led to improved child health outcomes and increased school participation. Studies show that deworming enhances children’s physical well-being and “It’s not just about treating the disease, it’s about giving these kids a better chance at life”, the local source tells The Borgen Project.

Hygiene Education and Infrastructure

The success of deworming programs in Angola depends on an integrated approach. Medication alone cannot stop the cycle of reinfection, especially in rural areas where poor sanitation and limited access to clean water drive continued transmission. To address this, school-based campaigns include hygiene education that teaches students proper handwashing, safe defecation and how to avoid contaminated water. Schools also act as community hubs, spreading these practices to families. Some schools receive additional support through partnerships with NGOs and government agencies, gaining improved facilities like latrines, handwashing stations and water filtration systems.

WHO highlights that combining water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) measures with deworming efforts can reduce transmission by more than 75%. This underscores the importance of holistic strategies for lasting impact.

Data-Driven Targeting

Disease mapping has played a critical role in Angola’s national response to schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminths (STHs). In collaboration with Angola’s Ministry of Health, the MENTOR Initiative conducted large-scale parasitological surveys across all 18 provinces. These surveys, involving more than 1.6 million school-aged children, used stool and urine sampling along with geospatial tools to determine prevalence rates and identify high-risk transmission zones.

The mapping results allowed for the strategic targeting of mass drug administration (MDA) campaigns, ensuring that treatment was concentrated in areas with the highest disease burden. By using prevalence thresholds recommended by WHO, Angola was able to tailor the frequency and intensity of treatment to the needs of each province. In addition to guiding the delivery of preventive chemotherapy, the data also support long-term monitoring, policy decision-making and evaluation of program impact.

Challenges and Local Resilience

Despite efforts, schistosomiasis in Angola continues to face several operational and infrastructural challenges. Limited access to clean water and adequate sanitation facilities in many rural areas contributes to persistent reinfection rates. Even with periodic MDA, the lack of improved WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) infrastructure undermines sustained disease control.

The program is also constrained by logistical difficulties such as inconsistent medicine supply chains and a shortage of trained personnel for implementation and monitoring. Regardless, integration of the deworming program into the existing school-based health system has helped optimize outreach and reduce costs. Capacity-building initiatives for local staff, as well as coordination with multiple stakeholders, including the Ministry of Education and international partners, have strengthened the program’s delivery and laid the foundation for more sustainable control efforts.

A Model Grounded in Elimination, Not Just Control

Angola’s approach mirrors a growing call in public health to shift from reactive control toward proactive elimination of schistosomiasis. As emphasized in Frontiers in Public Health, long-term success requires more than drug distribution; it depends on a systems-thinking model that integrates treatment with behavioral change, hygiene, snail control and environmental improvements.

By using schools as delivery platforms, Angola addresses multiple layers of disease transmission- medical, educational and ecological. This multifaceted approach offers a replicable blueprint for other countries. “The key is to involve the community and combine treatment with education and clean water,” the local health worker explained. “It’s not enough to give medicine- you have to change the environment and the habits. Angola’s model is working here and I believe it can help others, too.”

Health, Education and Hope

The integrated approach to fighting schistosomiasis in Angola demonstrates how local solutions, when grounded in data, education and community engagement, can spark meaningful change. With continued investment in health systems and infrastructure, the country is not just treating a disease but empowering a generation of children to learn, grow and thrive.

– Vasara Mikulevicius

Vasara is based in West Bloomfield, MI, USA and focuses on Global Health for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 5, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Precious Sheidu https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Precious Sheidu2025-08-05 07:30:082025-08-05 04:12:01Schistosomiasis in Angola: A Local Strategy With Global Impact
elderly poverty, Global Poverty

Elderly Poverty in Chad

Elderly Poverty in ChadChad is a landlocked country located at the crossroads of North and Central Africa. An independent nation since 1960, Chad is home to approximately 19 million people, of whom more than one million live in its capital, N’Djamena.

Despite its size and important resources like oil, Chad remains one of the most impoverished countries in the world. Poverty stretches to every corner of the country. However, one of the most susceptible victims, older people, are often ignored. Here are some facts about what elderly poverty in Chad looks like and how foreign aid can help minimize it. 

Facts About Elderly Poverty in Chad

  1. Chad has one of the youngest populations in the world, with a life expectancy at birth of 59 years and a median age of 14-15 years. Older adults (65 and above) made up about 7.5% of the population in 1985 but now account for just 3%, making it the smallest age group in Chad. This change reflects the country’s high birth rates and lack of accessibility to food and medical care.
  2. Chad has one of the lowest rates of accessible health care in the world, with the elderly being some of the most susceptible to diseases. Only 31.4% of Chad’s population has regular access to medical care, including doctors, hospitals, treatments and vaccinations. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), as of October 2020, Chad had just 4.3 doctors and 23.2 nurses per 100,000 inhabitants, far below the recommended 23 doctors and 23 nurses per 10,000. Most of these health professionals are concentrated in urban areas, making health care largely inaccessible to rural populations, especially elderly individuals who often face the greatest barriers to medical access.
  3. Noncommunicable diseases, such as diabetes, remain the leading cause of death for older people in Chad. Other leading causes of death include malaria, lower respiratory illnesses like pneumonia and diarrhoeal diseases like cholera. Elderly patients with diabetes and chronic illnesses, along with children, are the most susceptible to diseases like malaria and pneumonia.
  4. With refugees coming in from neighboring countries like Sudan, Sierra Leone and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the conflicts in these regions have spilled over into Chad. This instability has made outside trade difficult, leading to a low supply and high demand for essential resources, including food and medical aid.
  5. Chad has the lowest access to clean water and sanitation in the world. Only 43% of the population has access to clean water and just 10% has access to basic sanitation services.
  6. Organizations such as the WHO, the World Food Programme (WFP) and other humanitarian actors are actively working to combat poverty in Chad. In mid‑2024, WFP delivered food, cash and nutrition assistance to approximately one million people across crisis-affected communities, including refugees and internally displaced Chadians. The 2023–24 Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) for Chad sought approximately $921 million in funding and the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) allocated $15 million to address the most underfunded emergencies.

Conclusion

Elderly poverty in Chad remains a critical but often overlooked issue. Limited health care, food insecurity and poor sanitation leave older adults especially vulnerable. While humanitarian aid provides some relief, lasting change requires targeted support and stronger systems to protect Chad’s older population.

– Zoe Alatsas

Zoe is based in New York, NY, USA and focuses on Global Health and Politics for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Pickpik

August 5, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Lynsey 2 https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Lynsey 22025-08-05 07:30:002025-08-05 04:18:56Elderly Poverty in Chad
Disability, disability and poverty, Global Poverty

Disability and Poverty in Burkina Faso

Disability and Poverty in Burkina FasoIn Burkina Faso, disability and poverty are deeply intertwined. Limited access to education, health care and employment traps many people with disabilities in cycles of exclusion. Without targeted support, their potential remains overlooked and their rights are unfulfilled.

Disability in Burkina Faso is more than a personal health challenge; it is a profound development issue. In one of the world’s most impoverished nations, having a disability often means being locked out of education, employment and health care. When systems aren’t built for inclusion, the result is predictable: poverty deepens, inequality widens and national progress stalls.

Systemic Poverty and Exclusion

According to the Tigoung Nonma, a cooperative of disabled artisans, approximately 10% of Burkina Faso’s population lives with a disability. Yet most of them are invisible in public life. Due to structural barriers and social stigma, access to jobs, education and even buildings remains limited.

Not only that, but for families already surviving on less than $2 a day, caring for a disabled member without social safety nets often means sacrificing their own basic needs. Medical devices like wheelchairs or hearing aids are expensive and hard to use and accessible public infrastructure is scarce. Children with disabilities are more likely to drop out of school and adults face major hurdles in finding stable work.

Health System Gaps: Underserved and Underfunded

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Burkina Faso allocates just 6.3% of its GDP to health. This is far below the global average and far short of the need. Rural health centers are often unequipped to serve patients with specialized needs, especially those requiring physical therapy, long-term care or rehabilitation services.

Most of Burkina Faso’s more than 3,000 health facilities are inaccessible to people with mobility impairments. Similarly, a 2024 survey across French-speaking sub‑Saharan Africa revealed that Burkina Faso has only 26 physiotherapists, a staggering shortage for a needy population. For those with intellectual or developmental disabilities, the situation is even more dire. Most go undiagnosed, untreated and entirely unsupported, falling through the cracks of an already strained health care system.

Social Stigma and Discrimination

Beyond physical barriers, people with disabilities in Burkina Faso face deep social stigma. Misconceptions linking disability to witchcraft or divine punishment are still prevalent in rural areas, leading to neglect, abandonment and violence.

In employment and education, discrimination persists. Many children with disabilities are kept at home, denied enrollment in schools or bullied by peers. Adults are often excluded from the labor market entirely or relegated to informal work without legal protections.

A Vicious Cycle

Disability increases the likelihood of poverty and poverty increases the likelihood of disability. Malnutrition, unsafe childbirth, poor sanitation and lack of access to vaccinations contribute to preventable impairments in children. Meanwhile, poverty-stricken families often lack the knowledge or means to seek early intervention.

This cycle is especially damaging for women and girls, who face a double burden of gender and disability-based discrimination. They are less likely to attend school or access health care and more vulnerable to abuse.

Toward Inclusive Development

Thankfully, efforts are growing to integrate disability rights into national development plans. Burkina Faso ratified the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) in 2009 and has committed to more inclusive policies. However, Implementation remains slow.

Nonprofits like Light for the World and Humanity & Inclusion lead some of the most impactful initiatives. These organizations have progressed in supplying assistive devices and pushing for disability-inclusive budgets. Their work shows that inclusion isn’t just possible, it’s essential for sustainable development.

Conclusion

Disability and poverty in Burkina Faso are closely linked, forming a loop of exclusion that threatens the country’s development goals. The challenge is not disability but the failure to provide accessible infrastructure, inclusive policies and equal opportunities.

Addressing this issue requires more than charity; it demands systemic change, political will and international solidarity. Only then can Burkina Faso unlock the full potential of all its citizens, regardless of ability.

– De’Marlo Gray

De’Marlo is based in Long Beach, CA, USA and focuses on Global Health for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

August 5, 2025
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Lynsey 2 https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Lynsey 22025-08-05 03:00:512025-08-05 04:12:53Disability and Poverty in Burkina Faso
Disability, Global Poverty, Technology

SmartCane: Technology Empowers Blind Communities in India

SmartCaneIn India, visual disability affects approximately 0.23% of the population, with significantly higher rates, up to 1.53%, among older adults. Despite efforts to improve access, about 15% of people with visual disabilities still lack access to health care for their condition.

Barriers such as affordability, low literacy and geographic isolation disproportionately affect women, marginalized communities and people with low incomes. These challenges limit access not only to treatment but also to assistive devices like canes or glasses.

Smart cane technology in India is addressing this gap by using sensor-based innovation to improve mobility, independence and safety for people who are blind or visually impaired.

The Limits of Traditional Mobility Tools

An estimated 4.95 million people in India are blind and another 35 million are visually impaired. Cataracts and uncorrected refractive errors remain the leading causes of blindness and low vision, respectively.

Many of these individuals rely on traditional white canes for mobility. While helpful for detecting objects on the ground, conventional canes fail to detect obstacles above waist height, such as low-hanging signs or open windows.

This limitation increases the risk of accidents and discourages independent travel, especially in crowded or unfamiliar environments.

SmartCane Solution for Safer Navigation

Smart cane technology aims to overcome these limitations. The SmartCane was developed by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi in collaboration with Phoenix Medical Systems and Saksham Trust, with funding from the Wellcome Trust.

It is an electronic mobility aid that uses ultrasonic sensors to detect obstacles up to three meters away and at varying heights. The device sends tactile feedback through vibrations to alert users before impact. The SmartCane retails for around $34 and has reached more than 20,000 users across India and internationally.

Implementation and Impact

SmartCane’s distribution has primarily occurred through partnerships with NGOs, schools for the blind and regional disability centers in India. Saksham Trust, a key implementing partner, has helped train users to integrate the device into their daily routines. Instruction includes mobility training, orientation sessions and guidance on interpreting haptic feedback.

A study led by Rohan Paul, one of SmartCane’s innovators and a Rhodes Scholar, found a 93% reduction in collisions during a structured obstacle course compared to users of traditional canes. Another U.S.-based study of older adults evaluating smart mobility devices found that 83% supported the idea. Similarly, 100% believed they could learn to use it effectively with training. However, some raised concerns about accessibility, appearance and tech support.

Real Benefits Beyond Navigation

Smart canes give users greater independence, allowing them to move through public spaces and explore new places more confidently. Enhanced obstacle detection reduces the risk of injury and supports safer commuting. Integration with smartphones and other devices opens access to apps, navigation tools and public services.

However, affordability remains a barrier, especially for low-income users. About half of the people with visual disabilities can access recommended aids or appliances. Government subsidy programs and increased awareness could help scale the device’s reach and close these access gaps.

Looking Ahead

Smart cane technology in India illustrates how low-cost, scalable innovation can reshape the lives of people with disabilities. With further investment and inclusion in national disability programs, smart canes could empower millions to navigate their environments safely, independently and with dignity.

– Hayden Chedid

Hayden is based in Parker, CO, USA and focuses on Technology and Global Health for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

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Gender Equality, Global Poverty, Technology

Tackling the Digital Divide in Ghana

Digital Divide in GhanaGhana is a digital leader in West Africa, yet many women remain excluded from its benefits due to a range of cultural, social and economic barriers. World Bank data reveals that in 2021, 65% of Ghanaian women used the internet compared to 72% of men, a 7% gap. Furthermore, the disparity is even greater in digital finance, where 59% of women accessed mobile money versus 65% of men. This digital divide in Ghana limits women’s economic opportunities and their ability to participate fully in today’s digital economy.

Digital exclusion reinforces existing poverty and inequality, as equal access to advanced technologies is crucial for supporting women’s economic independence and fostering a more inclusive society. However, closing the digital divide in Ghana will give women the agency and empowerment to shape their futures and thrive in the digital economy.

Reasons Behind the Digital Divide

  • Existing Gender Inequality. Women in Ghana often have lower literacy levels, higher unemployment rates and lower incomes than men. Therefore, this existing divide makes it harder for women to understand how to use a mobile phone, successfully access the internet and learn new digital skills.
  • Affordability Barriers. In Ghana, women earn less than a third of what their male counterparts make. High data costs and the expense of owning a mobile phone limit women’s ability to access digital technologies and incorporate them into daily life easily.
  • Social Norms. Cultural norms in Ghana often place women in caregiving roles, discouraging them from STEM careers and making many reluctant to use digital technologies. This hesitation widens the digital divide, limiting women’s access to education, jobs and economic opportunities.

Current Initiatives

The GSM Association is a nonprofit that represents the interests of global mobile operators. It supports efforts to empower Ghanaian women with digital skills and access through complementary programs. Its ICT Skills for Entrepreneurial Women Empowerment initiative has trained 15,000 artisans and 720 female entrepreneurs in key digital skills. These include internet use, mobile money and social media marketing, helping them grow businesses and improve entrepreneurial growth.

To further enhance digital competence, the organization’s Mobile Internet Skills Training Toolkit offers free, multilingual video courses for micro-entrepreneurs. This initiative improves digital literacy, fosters economic independence and challenges traditional gender roles, opening new pathways for women in the workforce. Building on this digital foundation, the National Health Care Insurance Scheme’s mobile renewal option has boosted active membership by more than 50%, with 83% of women using this convenient service via mobile devices.

While these initiatives have seen success, the GSM Association surveys indicate that other e-government services are utilized at a lower rate. To tackle the digital divide in Ghana, external factors that hinder women from accessing such technologies must be taken into consideration. These include raising awareness, boosting digital literacy and addressing affordability barriers through targeted campaigns, training programs and expanded access to low-cost internet and devices.

Looking Ahead

“The Access to Agency: Empowering Women Through Digital Inclusion Conference,” held in July 2025, brought these challenges to the forefront. Indeed, sessions focused on expanding women’s access to smartphones, using WhatsApp networks for digital financial services and entrepreneurship and developing tailored safeguards to protect women’s privacy and safety online. By highlighting these priorities, the conference reinforced the need for targeted strategies that help women benefit equally from digital progress.

By putting women’s digital inclusion at the center of future strategies, Ghana can unlock new opportunities, reduce poverty and build a fairer, more prosperous society for all.

– Beatrice Punt

Beatrice is based in Manchester, UK and focuses on Technology and Solutions for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

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Education, Global Poverty

buildOn: Education To Help End Global Poverty

buildOnFor nearly 35 years, buildOn has worked globally to develop programs and build schools, using education as a tool to help end global poverty. Its efforts fuel a broader movement that provides developing countries with the resources to educate their populations properly.

An Overview of buildOn’s Impact

Since 1991, buildOn has been using education to help end global poverty. The organization has constructed more than 2,500 schools throughout its history, impacting more than 346,000 lives.

With the support of global donors, buildOn forms strong partnerships to expand its impact across multiple countries. In 2023, the organization set a new record for the number of schools built worldwide. It extended its literacy programs’ reach in new and existing schools.

Education as a Tool To End Global Poverty

buildOn partners with donors to fight global poverty by building schools in underserved rural communities. Its mission targets regions where access to education remains limited, focusing on countries with the greatest economic need.

Current buildOn school locations include:

  • Burkina Faso
  • Guatemala
  • Haiti
  • Malawi
  • Mali
  • Nepal
  • Nicaragua
  • Senegal

These countries face some of the highest poverty rates globally, with large segments of the population lacking access to quality education. Through its programs, buildOn works to close this gap and create pathways to opportunity for future generations.

Bridging the Education Gap for All Ages

buildOn’s education programs aim to eliminate discrimination in access to education by partnering with rural communities to educate people of all ages, from children to adults and seniors. In Burkina Faso, buildOn’s schools face significant challenges. Many rural areas lack basic infrastructure, forcing students to walk long distances to attend properly built schools in neighboring villages.

To break the cycle of poverty and lack of access to good education, buildOn aims to construct as many fully equipped schools as possible, ensuring each village has proper classrooms in underserved regions. When education becomes accessible to everyone, the chances of lifting communities out of poverty increase significantly. Many children who might otherwise drop out due to distance or poor facilities can now attend school and receive the education they deserve.

buildOn also supports adult learners through re-education programs that equip working adults with essential literacy and numeracy skills to improve their job prospects. In many rural communities, women comprise most adult participants, reflecting buildOn’s focus on empowering women. These programs boost economic opportunities and promote gender equality by giving women a stronger voice in their households and communities.

Final Remarks

Overall, buildOn’s programs aim to end global poverty by eliminating barriers to education through large-scale school development in rural areas. By partnering directly with local communities, buildOn ensures that each school is sustainably built and locally supported. These efforts provide children and adults with lifelong learning opportunities and help communities gain the tools needed to break generational cycles of poverty.

– Angelina Tas

Angelina is based in Cleveland, OH, USA and focuses on Good News and Technology for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

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