Ready to learn and thrive: school health and nutrition around the world
School health and nutrition programmes are among the most widely implemented public policies in the world.
School health and nutrition programmes are among the most widely implemented public policies in the world.
Report Card 17 explores how 43 OECD/EU countries are faring in providing healthy environments for children. Do children have clean water to drink? Do they have good-quality air to breathe? Are their homes free of lead and mould? How many children live in overcrowded homes?
This report, based on research undertaken from March to December 2021, provides findings and operational guidance for the implementation of comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) across Plan International and beyond.
Since 2007, the longitudinal and qualitative ‘Real Choices, Real Lives’ (RCRL) study has been tracking the lives of girls and their families in nine countries around the world.
This special issue of the Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE) offers empirical observations of the effects the COVID-19 pandemic has had on students, parents, and teachers in conflict and crisis-affected contexts.
Une étude de l'IFÉ consacrée à l'éducation à la sexualité face aux normes de genre et aux enjeux de sa mise en œuvre dans les établissements scolaires. L’éducation à la sexualité est une question vive et pourtant ancienne.
This report presents findings from the fourth round of the Survey on National Education Responses to COVID-19 School Closures, administered between April–July 2022 with responses from Ministries of Education in 93 countries.
Many SRHR programmes are delivered through a sexual risk perspective – which means emphasising the negative consequences of sexual activity, such as unintended pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections.
La corruption sexuelle demeure prévalente en milieu scolaire et universitaire à Madagascar. En 2021, Transparency International - Initiative Madagascar (TI-MG) a réalisé une enquête sur l’état des lieux dans les Régions Analamanga, Diana et Atsinanana.
The sanitary and economic shocks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic brought about the most significant disruption in the history of the education sector in Latin America and the Caribbean region, leading to school closures at all levels and affecting over 170 million students throughout the region.