Menstrual health in East Asia and the Pacific regional progress review: Lao People's Democratic Republic
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Lao PDR.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Lao PDR.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Kiribati.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Indonesia.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Micronesia.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Fiji. In addition, it aims to collate lessons learned and stakeholders’ insights on barriers and enablers to effective action including high-quality monitoring and evaluation.
This country profile has the objective to document the state of policy and programming to support menstrual health in Cambodia.
Food security is both a necessary condition and a potential outcome of quality education.
This policy brief has been prepared by the Sustainable Finance Initiative (SFI) of the School Meals Coalition – a partnership between governments, UN agencies, NGOs, and research institutions aimed at expanding the reach and strengthening the quality of school feeding programmes.
The Barbados school nutrition policy expresses a common vision of the measures required to improve nutrition and physical activity in the school setting. It applies to all public and private schools and educational institutions from preschool to tertiary level.
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?