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The COVID-19 pandemic is anticipated to contribute to widespread food insecurity and malnutrition and have long-term
Displaced adolescent girls and women face many challenges managing their monthly menstrual flow with dignity.
This report is the first installment of the ‘Social Science in Epidemics’ series, commissioned by the USAID Office of U.S.
Humanitarian agencies strive to provide sanitation facilities which are safe, accessible and afford users privacy and dignity.
Camps are places of refuge for people fleeing conflict and disaster, but they can be dangerous, especially for women and girls.
There is a significant gap in empirical evidence on the menstrual hygiene management (MHM) challenges faced by adolescent girls and
Global attention on improving the integration of menstrual hygiene management (MHM) into humanitarian response is growing.
As an alternative, CLTS can appear fundamentally mismatched with post-emergency and fragile states contexts: the core
Dispensers are a source-based water quality intervention with promising uptake results in development contexts.
Over the last 15 years there has been increasing attention to adolescent girls' and women's menstrual hygiene management (MHM) needs