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Map of South Sudan

Save the Children worked in South Sudan prior to its independence in 2011, and we remain a leading charity for children’s humanitarian relief and development. In fact, we are the national focal point for family tracing and reunification, launching innovative approaches, as well as the lead health and nutrition provider in several South Sudanese states.

We provide South Sudan’s children with access to education, health care and nutrition support, as well as families with food security and livelihoods assistance. Our child protection programs support vulnerable children including former child soldiers and those affected by violence and displacement. We advocate for children’s rights at national, state and community levels.

In a country affected by regular outbreaks of conflict, food shortages and natural disasters such as floods, we are ready to respond to the needs of children and their families.

Here are some recent examples of our work:

A healthy start in life

  • Based on Save the Children’s innovative integrated community case management approach, we’re ensuring children in remote, low-resource settings get access to health care by training, supplying and supporting community health workers who can diagnose, treat and refer children for care before it’s too late
  • We’re supporting maternal health through prenatal care, labor and delivery services and postnatal care services
  • We’re running health centers and feeding program sites for infants and young children suffering from malnutrition
  • We’re treating children for deadly diseases, like malaria, diarrhea and pneumonia, and delivering vaccinations
  • We’re helping build the capacity of the government health ministry to prevent and address malnutrition
  • We’re guarding children and their families against communicable diseases

The opportunity to learn

  • To make schools function for the future of children, Save the Children is stepping up to train and support teachers and distribute learning supplies so children can stay in school
  • We’re supporting curriculum development at the national level, constructing classrooms, providing temporary learning spaces, implementing water, sanitation and hygiene programs, supporting early learning centers, training teachers and promoting community engagement – this includes early childhood care and development, basic education, pastoralist education and accelerated learning programs
  • In 2019, we expanded our Healing and Education through the ARTS (HEART) program, supporting children affected by conflict, displacement and poverty
  • We’re offering young people who dropped out of school, including girls who left education early to get married and former child soldiers, with access to practical courses in a variety of disciplines, including carpentry, masonry, hairdressing, agriculture and tailoring
  • We’re providing vulnerable families with skills training, equipment and support to set up small businesses, including empowering farmers to increase what they grow and can sell at market by teaching agricultural techniques, as well as providing livestock and improving access to markets

Protection from harm

  • Our work is focused on strengthening national systems to be able to address four key child protection issues: separated and unaccompanied children, children without appropriate care, economic and sexual exploitation of children and violence against children, including violence against children in armed conflict
  • We are the national focal point for family tracing and reunification, working with community leaders, local authorities, armed forces, police, judiciary, teachers and children themselves to build the long-term child protection capacity of communities
  • We’re advocating for a national minimum age for marriage

Innovation

  • We worked with partners to develop, publish and pilot the Newborn Health in Humanitarian Settings: A Field Guide
  • We’re launching a new app to help trace and reunify children and families, involving a database that frontline protection workers can update and monitor in real time, along with a first-ever case management handbook

Emergency response

  • We implement emergency response programs wherever there is a need, with a special focus on the most vulnerable communities, including prepositioning non-food items including shelter kits in areas that are vulnerable to conflict or natural disaster, training partners and local government representatives in disaster risk reduction and emergency preparedness and response
  • We serve as co-chair of the UN’s Education in Emergencies association, working to ensure children’s education is not disrupted in times of crisis
  • We’re providing refugee children with safe places to play and access to psychosocial support, have set up and conducted training on community-based child protection mechanisms, and are supporting the reunification of children who have been separated from their families
  • Responding to the current hunger crisis, we’re assisting families through cash and food distributions, empowering them to meet their own needs and feed their families using available local resources
  • We’re distributing emergency livelihood services to support pastoralists, including seeds, tools and livestock, plus veterinary services
  • We responded to recent floods in areas without access to essential services, working with the government and local partners, to provide lifesaving food, water, medicine and other critical relief for children and their families

Source http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=A7F90CAA8301496CB29433C12CA2ACE6&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.savethechildren.org%2Fus%2Fwhere-we-work%2Fsouth-sudan&c=5368640511819292062&mkt=en-ca