Save the Children
ICFP2022 Sponsor
Key Links & Information
Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Resource Center
Save the Children’s Resource Centre is an online library that hosts comprehensive, reliable and up-to-date information on Save the Children’s work and the thematic areas: Child Protection, Child Rights Governance, Health and Nutrition, Education and Child Poverty. The website is open to the public and provides access to over 7,000 quality-assured materials in one convenient location. Over 30,000 users from all around the world use the Resource Centre every month.
Save the Children’s Family Planning Resource Center
Save the Children’s Resource Centre is an online library that hosts comprehensive, reliable and up-to-date information on Save the Children’s work and the thematic areas: Child Protection, Child Rights Governance, Health and Nutrition, Education and Child Poverty. The website is open to the public and provides access to over 7,000 quality-assured materials in one convenient location. Over 30,000 users from all around the world use the Resource Centre every month.
Save the Children delivers high impact interventions for women and girls. We do this by:
- Prioritizing the hardest to reach, including adolescents.
- Improving clinical capacity and supply chains, particularly at the lowest level
of service delivery. - Engaging men, women and communities to create an enabling environment
for family planning use, including addressing inequitable gender norms. - Delivering family planning in humanitarian responses.
- Advocating for supportive policies for family planning in partnership
with local leaders and organizations.
A leader of the IAWG sub-working group on ASRH in emergencies, the video linked to below was developed with two youth leaders.
Video Spotlight
Featured Content
Growing Up Great! Implementation Guide
This guide was prepared by Save the Children under the Passages Project.
How Social Norms Influence Provider Provision of Contraceptive Services to Adolescents
Insights for provider behavior change from qualitative research in Nairobi