News

London, UK – 22/7/25 – The ONE Campaign has reacted to the publication of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s (FCDO) annual report with three key insights – and why they matter for the ...
WASHINGTON – The ONE Campaign released the following statement in response to Senate passage of an Administration-requested rescissions package, after removing the requested $400 million rescission ...
COVID-19 has exposed fault lines in both rich and poor countries. From failing public healthcare systems to racial inequality, the pandemic has laid bare unjust and inequitable structures that are ...
Mammadu, a non-profit in Namibia, is helping students achieve brighter futures. Here’s a closer look at how.
That's 130 million potential engineers, entrepreneurs, or political leaders that the world is missing out on.
Vaccines can save an additional 1.5 million people — but we need to address these challenges first.
Rich countries spent US$2.7 trillion on domestic fossil fuel subsidies between 2010 and 2022, six times more than the US$437 billion they committed to provide for international climate finance over ...
This year’s World Cup in Qatar reminds us that it’s important to stand up for what is right. Meet 8 footballers who are doing just that.
A new report found immunizations provided by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, helped save 1.3 million lives from preventable disease in 2023. Gavi has prevented a total of 18.8 million deaths since 2000.
Last year, Njeri, a hawker in Nairobi, was paying 90 shillings (roughly $0.8) for a packet of maizemeal. Today the same packet goes for 120 shillings, a 30% increase. She is also paying more for ...
We’re closer than ever before to ending extreme poverty. In 1990, 36% of the world’s population was living on less than US$1.90 a day. By 2015, this figure had shrunk to just 10%. That’s over a ...
Thirty years ago, HIV/AIDS swept the globe largely unchecked, and a diagnosis was seen as a death sentence. Two decades later, we’ve made amazing progress – AIDS-related deaths are down by half – but ...