The value of sponsoring a child

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RMIT is working in collaboration with World Vision International to evaluate the impacts of their child sponsorship programs.

The research team led by Associate Professor Simon Feeny and Cara Donahue in the School of Economics, Finance and Marketing and Professor Patricia Rogers in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies.

External research partners include Professor Matthew Clarke of Deakin University, Dr Michael Jennings of SOAS, University of London and Gill Westhorp of Community Matters.

“The research will involve fieldwork in five locations across Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America,” Feeny said.

“It will examine how World Vision’s community based approach improves the well-being of children and the way this is supported by child sponsorship.”

Another component of the research will examine how World Vision’s Christian faith influences its development work.

Despite receiving more than US$1 billion of funding each year, there is very little existing research on the impacts of child sponsorship programs.

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The new research project seeks to promote evidence-based practice and to improve the impact of World Vision’s programs in developing countries.

World Vision’s child sponsorship programs help children living in developing countries through a community based approach to development. Its programs reach about 100 million people in nearly 100 countries.

(Source: RMIT University)

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Date Created: January 15, 2016 Date Modified: January 18, 2016