9 orgs in this activity group
Every organization with primary activities in On-Site Livelihood Enterprises or any of the groups nested inside it. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MALAIKA CHILD CARE VILLAGES Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 2 |
| 2 | MOTHERS OF MERCY ORPHANS PROJECT MOTHERS OF MERCY ORPHANS PROJECT operates as Mother's Mercy Home, a faith-based children's home under the Anglican Church of Kenya, founded in 2001 by the Moth… | — | — | 2 |
| 3 | THE GOOD SAMARITAN ORPHANAGE CENTRE Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 2 |
| 4 | ABBA FATHER ORGANIZATION Children's home in Kenya providing long-term residential care for approximately 40 orphaned or vulnerable children, offering housing, education, food, and spir… | — | — | 1 |
| 5 | GIRLS EMPOWERMENT FOUNDATION Girls Empowerment Foundation supports girls in Kenya by providing education, housing, nutrition, and a safe environment. They operate a children's home and a p… | — | — | 1 |
| 6 | MEJJA SHEKIM FOUNDATION Shekinah Foundation is a nonprofit organization focused on providing holistic support, education, and shelter to orphaned and abandoned children, particularly … | — | — | 1 |
| 7 | MSAMARIA MWEMA KENYA Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 8 | UPENDO CHILDRENS REHABILITATION CENTRE (MURANGA) The Eunice-Upendo Project is an Irish registered charity that supports the Upendo Children’s Rehabilitation Center (UCRC) in Muranga, Kenya. UCRC provides acco… | — | — | 1 |
| 9 | YATIMA FOUNDATION Yatima Outreach Organization is a Kenya-based nonprofit that supports orphaned and vulnerable children through integrated programs in education, health, social… | — | — | 1 |
strategies used in this activity group
Approaches extracted from orgs working in this activity group and the groups nested inside it. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Integrated Holistic Support 7 orgsBy addressing multiple interconnected needs—such as education, health, emotional well-being, and family or economic stability—within a unified model, organizations produce sustainable development and break cycles of poverty and vulnerability, because isolated interventions fail to overcome the compounding nature of systemic disadvantage. This strategy centers on the belief that vulnerability is multidimensional and that lasting change requires coordinated, simultaneous support across social, emotional, economic, and physical domains. Unlike targeted or siloed approaches that address one need in isolation (e.g., education alone), this model ensures that basic needs, dignity, and systemic barriers are addressed together, creating a stable foundation for long-term growth. It is distinguished by its emphasis on synergy across services and its focus on root causes rather than symptoms.MOTHERS OF MERCY ORPHANS PROJECTMSAMARIA MWEMA KENYATHE GOOD SAMARITAN ORPHANAGE CENTREYATIMA FOUNDATION
- Community-Led Development 3 orgsBy placing decision-making power and resources in the hands of local communities, sustainable and culturally appropriate development outcomes are achieved, because local ownership fosters accountability, relevance, and long-term resilience. This strategy centers on the belief that communities are the primary agents of their own development. Rather than imposing external solutions, organizations using this approach support communities to identify needs, design interventions, and manage resources, ensuring that initiatives reflect local priorities and knowledge. It differs from top-down or purely service-delivery models by emphasizing self-determination, participatory governance, and systemic empowerment rather than short-term aid.MALAIKA CHILD CARE VILLAGESMOTHERS OF MERCY ORPHANS PROJECTTHE GOOD SAMARITAN ORPHANAGE CENTRE
- Family-Model Care 3 orgsBy placing children in family-style residential environments rather than institutions, we produce better emotional, social, and developmental outcomes, because stable, nurturing, and relational caregiving structures are essential for healing and long-term well-being. This strategy centers on replacing impersonal institutional care with intentional family-like settings—whether through household models, community elders, or volunteer-supported families—to create consistent, loving environments for vulnerable children. It distinguishes itself from standalone services like education or food support by prioritizing relational stability as the foundational precondition for all other development outcomes. While other strategies may deliver aid in fragmented forms, this approach treats the restoration of family and community bonds as the core mechanism of change.ABBA FATHER ORGANIZATIONMALAIKA CHILD CARE VILLAGESMSAMARIA MWEMA KENYA
- Integrated Development with Local Ownership 3 orgsBy combining multi-sectoral interventions with community-led design and sustainable financing models, organizations produce resilient and scalable development outcomes, because solutions rooted in local agency, cultural context, and economic self-reliance are more likely to endure and create systemic change. This strategy unifies education, livelihoods, nutrition, climate resilience, and social support within a single, coordinated framework that centers community participation and long-term sustainability. Unlike siloed interventions, it treats poverty and vulnerability as interconnected challenges requiring co-created, holistic solutions—distinguishing it from standalone education or aid-based models by embedding financial mechanisms (like cross-subsidization and "pay-it-forward") and environmental sustainability into the core of service delivery. The shared belief across organizations is that durable change emerges not just from access to services, but from empowering communities asMEJJA SHEKIM FOUNDATIONTHE GOOD SAMARITAN ORPHANAGE CENTREYATIMA FOUNDATION
- Holistic Transformation through Integrated Faith and Empowerment 2 orgsBy integrating spiritual engagement with socio-economic empowerment and relational care, organizations produce sustainable personal and community transformation, because combining faith, dignity, and agency addresses root causes of poverty and fosters mutual ownership of change. This strategy unifies faith-based motivation with comprehensive development practices—spanning education, trauma-informed care, vocational training, and community-led initiatives—not as parallel activities but as interdependent levers for deep, lasting change. Unlike models that treat material aid or evangelism in isolation, this approach depends on the synergy between spiritual purpose, relational trust, and capacity-building to shift individuals from dependency to leadership within their own communities.MOTHERS OF MERCY ORPHANS PROJECTYATIMA FOUNDATION
- Arts-Based Empowerment 1 orgBy engaging marginalized individuals in arts-based activities, we produce personal agency, healing, and social inclusion, because creative expression fosters emotional resilience, builds confidence, and enables individuals to reclaim their voice and identity. This strategy centers the transformative power of the arts—not just as a tool for skill development but as a holistic mechanism for psychological, social, and economic empowerment. It distinguishes itself from purely educational or vocational models by prioritizing emotional and identity-based growth as foundational to sustainable development, weaving together therapeutic, cultural, and economic outcomes through creative practice.THE GOOD SAMARITAN ORPHANAGE CENTRE
- Education as Protection 1 orgBy providing safe, accessible, and holistic education environments, we protect girls from gender-based harms like FGM, child marriage, and child labor, because schooling removes them from high-risk contexts and creates structural alternatives that delay and prevent exploitation. This strategy positions education not only as a developmental right but as an immediate protective intervention. It integrates physical safety, normative change, and systemic support—such as boarding schools, menstrual hygiene, and community engagement—to disrupt pathways to harm. Unlike standalone education programs, this approach explicitly links school access to risk mitigation, treating education as a shield against intersecting vulnerabilities.GIRLS EMPOWERMENT FOUNDATION