13 orgs in this activity group
Every organization with primary activities in Policy & Rights Advocacy 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 | BLOSSOM MENTAL HEALTH FOUNDATION Youth Blossom is a nonprofit organization based in Nairobi, Kenya, dedicated to uplifting youth by addressing socioeconomic disparities and promoting mental we… | — | — | 2 |
| 2 | BEAM CHILDRENS KENYA Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 3 | DRUG ABUSE ADDICTION COUNSELING INTERNATIONAL (DAAC INTERNATIONAL) Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 4 | EDUCATION AND HEALTH FOR CHILDREN IN KENYA ACHILD Kenya advances maternal, child, and adolescent wellbeing through integrated health, education, and climate-resilient solutions in underserved communitie… | — | — | 1 |
| 5 | GLOBAL CHILDREN CHARITY ChildFund Kenya is an operational nonprofit dedicated to improving the well-being of children and youth across Kenya. They work with local partners to deliver … | — | — | 1 |
| 6 | HOLISTIC PEER SUPPORT CENTER (HPSC) The Holistic Peer Support Center (HPSC) is a Kenya-based mental health and wellness organization that bridges the gap between professional mental healthcare an… | — | — | 1 |
| 7 | HOPE FOR THE HOPELESS ORGANIZATION Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 8 | KNOWLEDGE FOR EMPOWERMENT OF YOU TH Knowledge for Empowerment of Youth (KEY) builds and equips school libraries in Kenya, Tanzania, and Ghana to improve educational outcomes for underserved stude… | — | — | 1 |
| 9 | NAIROBI EAST ORGANIZATION FOR THE INTELLECTUALLY CHALLENGED Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 10 | NANYUKI FURAHA ORGANIZATION Nanyuki Furaha Foundation is a charitable non-governmental organization based in Nanyuki, Kenya, founded in 2014. It provides a nurturing, educational, and sec… | — | — | 1 |
| 11 | ORGANIZATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV( Y+ - KENYA) Y+ Kenya is a youth-led network organization formed in 2018 that advocates for the rights of young people living with and affected by HIV. It serves as an umbr… | — | — | 1 |
| 12 | RIGHTS IN ACTION COALITION ORGANIZATION The provided website content is from "The Kenyan Tabloid," a news publication. It features articles on various topics including politics, social issues, and ec… | — | — | 1 |
| 13 | VICTORY CHILDRENS HOME FOUNDATION Victory Child Empowerment is a Kenya-based nonprofit organization focused on child protection, education, and economic empowerment for underprivileged children… | — | — | 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.
- Community-Led Development 5 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.BLOSSOM MENTAL HEALTH FOUNDATIONHOPE FOR THE HOPELESS ORGANIZATIONKNOWLEDGE FOR EMPOWERMENT OF YOU THRIGHTS IN ACTION COALITION ORGANIZATION
- Integrated Holistic Support 4 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.BEAM CHILDRENS KENYAGLOBAL CHILDREN CHARITYNANYUKI FURAHA ORGANIZATIONVICTORY CHILDRENS HOME FOUNDATION
- Empowerment Through Participation 3 orgsBy engaging individuals and communities as active agents in decision-making and program design, we foster sustainable social change, because inclusive participation builds ownership, strengthens local capacity, and transforms power dynamics. This strategy centers on shifting power from external actors to communities by prioritizing participatory processes, whether through dialogue, media, governance, or economic inclusion. It appears across diverse issue areas—from peacebuilding to youth engagement and development—unified by the belief that lasting change emerges when people shape their own solutions. Unlike top-down or service-delivery models, this approach treats community agency as the engine of resilience and transformation.DRUG ABUSE ADDICTION COUNSELING INTERNATIONAL (DAAC INTERNATIONAL)NANYUKI FURAHA ORGANIZATIONRIGHTS IN ACTION COALITION ORGANIZATION
- 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 asBEAM CHILDRENS KENYAEDUCATION AND HEALTH FOR CHILDREN IN KENYAVICTORY CHILDRENS HOME FOUNDATION
- Amplifying Lived Experience 2 orgsBy centering programs on the lived experience of beneficiaries through peer leadership, storytelling, and community-led design, we produce more trusted, relevant, and sustainable outcomes, because shared experience builds authenticity, reduces stigma, and increases engagement in ways that external expertise alone cannot. This strategy involves systematically integrating the knowledge, voice, and agency of people with direct experience of a social issue—such as drug use, disability, gender-based violence, or poor health—into service delivery, advocacy, and program design. It distinguishes itself from top-down or expert-driven models by treating lived experience as a form of expertise that enhances program legitimacy, cultural resonance, and behavioral impact. Unlike general community engagement, this approach positions affected individuals as leaders, educators, and change agents rather than passive recipients.NAIROBI EAST ORGANIZATION FOR THE INTELLECTUALLY CHALLENGEDORGANIZATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV( Y+ - KENYA)
- 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.BEAM CHILDRENS KENYAVICTORY CHILDRENS HOME FOUNDATION
- Holistic, Community-Driven Integration 2 orgsBy integrating services across health, education, economic, and social domains within community-led systems, organizations achieve sustainable inclusion and systemic change, because addressing interconnected barriers through locally owned, multidimensional approaches ensures relevance, reduces fragmentation, and builds collective agency. This strategy emphasizes the convergence of multidisciplinary support—such as healthcare, education, livelihoods, and psychosocial services—not as isolated interventions but as coordinated, community-embedded systems. It distinguishes itself from siloed service models by prioritizing local ownership, cultural alignment, and the simultaneous tackling of structural, economic, and attitudinal barriers, thereby fostering long-term resilience and equity.NAIROBI EAST ORGANIZATION FOR THE INTELLECTUALLY CHALLENGEDORGANIZATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV( Y+ - KENYA)
- Integrated, Trauma-Informed Care 2 orgsBy integrating trauma-informed, person-centered, and holistic service delivery across mental, physical, and social domains, organizations foster sustainable healing and resilience, because recovery is most effective when care acknowledges systemic, psychological, and bodily impacts of trauma and builds trust through lived-experience-informed, coordinated support. This strategy unifies trauma-informed principles with multidisciplinary, holistic care models that center the individual’s experience across multiple domains—mental health, physical health, social reintegration, and community belonging. It goes beyond standalone services by intentionally linking clinical interventions with peer support, family and community engagement, and systemic advocacy, ensuring continuity and cultural resonance. What distinguishes it from narrower clinical or outreach models is its foundational belief that healing requires alignment across levels of care and deep respect for survivor agency, context, anDRUG ABUSE ADDICTION COUNSELING INTERNATIONAL (DAAC INTERNATIONAL)HOLISTIC PEER SUPPORT CENTER (HPSC)
- Trauma-Informed Holistic Development 2 orgsBy integrating trauma-informed care with holistic support across emotional, familial, educational, and spiritual domains, we produce sustainable child well-being and resilience, because healing from adversity requires addressing interconnected root causes rather than isolated symptoms. This strategy centers on the understanding that trauma is a foundational barrier to development, and that effective intervention must be both psychologically sensitive and multidimensionally supportive. Unlike narrowly focused approaches—such as education-only sponsorship or temporary shelter—this model unifies therapeutic, familial, educational, and community-based elements around the child’s lived experience of trauma. It distinguishes itself by treating psychological safety and relational continuity as prerequisites for lasting change, rather than add-ons to material support.BEAM CHILDRENS KENYAGLOBAL CHILDREN CHARITY
- Culturally Grounded Empowerment 1 orgBy embedding programs in local culture, values, and community leadership, we achieve sustainable behavior change and improved health and social outcomes, because interventions are more trusted, accessible, and effective when they reflect the lived experiences and belief systems of the people they serve. This strategy centers cultural resonance as a core driver of engagement and impact, going beyond translation or adaptation to co-create solutions with communities using indigenous knowledge, trusted messengers, and context-specific practices. It distinguishes itself from generic or clinical models by prioritizing relational trust, local ownership, and identity-affirming approaches across diverse domains—from mental health and HIV prevention to gender norms and youth development—unifying efforts that might otherwise appear operationally distinct.DRUG ABUSE ADDICTION COUNSELING INTERNATIONAL (DAAC INTERNATIONAL)
- Family-Model Care 1 orgBy 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.VICTORY CHILDRENS HOME FOUNDATION
- Human Rights-Based Empowerment 1 orgBy grounding programs in human rights frameworks and centering marginalized voices in advocacy and decision-making, organizations foster systemic change and empowerment, because rights-based approaches transform power structures, promote accountability, and enable individuals to claim their rights as duty-bearers are held responsible. This strategy unifies efforts that go beyond service delivery by embedding human rights principles into programming, legal empowerment, education, and advocacy. It emphasizes structural change through local leadership, policy influence, and the transformation of social norms—distinguishing it from purely technical or charitable interventions by treating beneficiaries as rights-holders and targeting root causes of inequity.HOPE FOR THE HOPELESS ORGANIZATION