Supporting Hope and Homes for Children’s crisis response
A&O’s partnership with Hope and Homes for Children is working to end the institutional care of children around the world.
Read more"Families, not institutions.", registered Not-for-Profit company (K2017489514) / PBO(930073885), working in South Africa to support Gauteng Department of Social Development deinstitutionalise the child protection system.
A&O’s partnership with Hope and Homes for Children is working to end the institutional care of children around the world.
Read moreThe invasion of Ukraine is a crisis on many fronts. Our primary concern right now is for the safety of the country’s children, most immediately, for the 100,000 children confined in 700 orphanages across the country, the unseen victims of this conflict, and the children at risk of being separated from their families.
Read moreHHCSA00 Intervention Plan https://testlab.1child1family.org.za/hhcsa00-intervention-plan/ HHCSA01 Initial Assessment for Case Manager https://testlab.1child1family.org.za/hhcsa01-initial-assessment-for-case-manager/ HHCSA01b Initial Assessment – Care-leavers https://testlab.1child1family.org.za/hhcsa01b-initial-assessment-care-leavers/
Read morewww.hopeandhomes.org.za. Access online digital toolsets.
www.1child1family.org.za. South African Child Care Reform.
The White Paper on Families views the family as a key development imperative and seeks to mainstream family issues into government-wide policy-making.
The vision of the White Paper was to have well-functioning families which were loving, peaceful, safe, stable, and economically self-sustaining.
Celebrating International Women’s Day today,
by remembering and honoring the courage and commitment
all the remarkable women here at HHCSA bring to the world 💐🌻
Update 3 March 2022: Overnight, as the situation deteriorated in Dnipro, our social workers supported the emergency evacuation of 70 children (including two babies and two disabled children). They’ve now left our community centre, where they’ve been hunkered down for the past seven days, and have been moved to a safer location. Working with the local authorities, we remain committed to protecting these children, for as long as it takes. Without generous donations from the public, our team simply wouldn’t be able to keep these children safe.”
Read moreUpdate 3 March 2022: Overnight, as the situation deteriorated in Dnipro, our social workers supported the emergency evacuation of 70 children (including two babies and two disabled children). They’ve now left our community centre, where they’ve been hunkered down for the past seven days, and have been moved to a safer location. Working with the local authorities, we remain committed to protecting these children, for as long as it takes. Without generous donations from the public, our team simply wouldn’t be able to keep these children safe.”
Read more