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15 Dec 2025

global

Aid After 2025: Why the Private Sector must become core to humanitarian response

As traditional funding collapses and crises escalate, businesses bring more than money; they offer innovation, scale, and new models for sustaining aid. But partnerships must be carefully governed to avoid unintended harm. This article was originally published on TRTWorld.

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10 Dec 2025

global

Why children need safer, age-appropriate online spaces and not blanket bans

As policymakers across the world grapple with how to keep children safe online, a growing number are recommending age-based social media 'bans' as a tool to help keep children safe. While laudable in intent, at Save the Children, we are concerned that laws banning children’s access to online spaces – particularly if used in isolation – risk creating unintended harms, and a false sense of safety, as well as curtailing the opportunities that online environments offer to children. There are better alternatives.

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What the Ceasefire means for Children in Gaza – and what comes next

The announcement of a pause in hostilities offers a moment of hope for children and families in Gaza. But while it provides a brief respite, it is not enough. 

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19 Mar 2025

global

Foreign Aid Cuts: The real impact on children and our programmes

Foreign aid funding cuts are putting our lifesaving work under threat globally.  Over 40 countries we operate in have been impacted across Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe and the Middle East.  Learn more about the real impact of foreign cuts on children and our programmes in this blog. 

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Save the Children and local partner deliver aid via boat to flood-hit Sumatra, Indonesia

When money moves away from children

It has been a brutal year for organisations working with and for children. Funding has collapsed, programmes have been cut back, and children are paying the price. But this is not a world short of money. There are choices being made. 

Shurouq looks through winter kit

GAZA STAFF ACCOUNT: “You cannot move on while living in the same place where you experienced your worst nightmares.”

Shurouq, 31, is a Save the Children staff member in Gaza. Shurouq lost her husband after he was killed in the first weeks of the war. Along with her 3-year-old daughter, Karmel*, Shurouq has been displaced many times during the war.

Inger Ashing, SCI CEO, listening to children at a collective shelter in Beirut, Lebanon

The Cost of War: Children Are Paying the Highest Price in the Middle East Conflict

As global headlines focus on soaring oil prices and financial turmoil, there is a risk of overlooking the real human cost of the Middle East conflict – the devastating toll it is taking on children. 

Families fleeing to the river bank in Akobo County, South Sudan

Staff Account: "I saw children seated next to their deceased parents"

Reath James Nyaluak*, 39, is a finance officer with Save the Children in Akobo County, South Sudan. Reath has been displaced several times since he was a child, however he says the latest violence in Jonglei state is as bad as he’s seen. Reath was in Walgak in January when he was forced to flee due to violence, and Akobo town when it was evacuated in March.

Bashir*, 2, with his mother Mahasin*, at Save the Children clinic in Blue Nile, Sudan

We can prevent maternal and newborn deaths - but the political will and funding is still missing

As we move through 2026, the world is facing a stark reality: families and children are experiencing some of the greatest and most urgent needs in modern history.

Johnny at the UN Security Council on Safe Education to Prevent the Recruitment and Use of Children in Armed Conflict

What I Told Members of the UN Security Council About the Recruitment and Use of Children in Haiti—and What We Need to Do Next

In Haiti today, a child can be recruited into an armed group with a pair of sneakers and the promise of a reliable meal. Johnny Cesar Etienne, Save the Children in Haiti Operations Director, recently told members of the UN Security Council what that says about the conditions facing a generation of children and what must be done to stop it. 

Jana, Awards Management Coordinator in Lebanon

LEBANON STAFF ACCOUNT: Forced to flee but we are among the lucky ones

Jana, 28, is Save the Children’s Awards Management Coordinator in Lebanon. She has been displaced three times by conflict in Lebanon, the first time when she was eight years old. Jana and her family fled their house in Beirut on 2 March shortly after missiles struck a nearby neighbourhood. Jana studied petrochemical engineering before becoming a humanitarian worker.

Latifa Mattar Headshot

STAFF ACCOUNT: No Child Should Grow Up Used to the Sound of Explosions

A Save the Children staff member and mother based in the Gulf on experiencing conflict for the first time and what it reveals about children everywhere.