Comprehensive programs addressing key development challenges in Sindh
SCF firmly believes education is a fundamental right and a powerful tool for community development. Advocacy, enrolment & retention drives, teacher training, STEM for girls, education through sports, adult literacy, and implementation of Article 25-A.
Learn MoreMore than half a million women cotton pickers face economic exploitation and hazardous conditions in Sindh. SCF advocates for rights, organizes trade unions, Climate Safety Kits, literacy centers, and wage increases from Rs. 600 to Rs. 1,000 per day.
Learn MoreThe Food Security and Livelihood through Income Generation lies at the center of SCF's poverty reduction strategy. Goats for breeding, sewing machines, grants, vocational training, embroidery, livestock, poultry, and small business start-ups.
Learn MoreSCF addresses deforestation, climate literacy for women agriculture workers, Climate Safety Kits, eco-friendly shades, green housing, climate-smart livestock, PYLI youth leadership, renewable energy, and urban waste management.
Learn MoreSCF provides climate-resilient RO water filtration plants, 200 household toilets, ODF certification for 600 villages, hygiene education, and WASH in emergency for flood-affected communities across Matiari and Thatta.
Learn MoreReproductive health mobile camps for 1,220 women, HIV awareness for youth, mental health campaigns, SURMI project for women's health and climate resilience, and Rahbar male caregiver engagement for immunization.
Learn MoreSCF trained 1,500+ young people through Active Citizens Model. Governance, climate action, SRHR advocacy, agro-based solar PV skills for income generation (Rs. 20,000-25,000/month), and youth leadership for resilience.
Learn MoreFlood 2022 response, food and hygiene kits, DRR committees, Emergency Response Teams, school-based DRR, heritage-focused Mohenjo Daro DRR plan, and community-led disaster preparedness across Sanghar and Thatta.
Learn MoreAdvocacy for pro-women laws, GBV-climate nexus research, 56 lawyers oriented on survivor-centered approaches, district referral mechanisms, GTA workshops with 242 participants, and behavioural change for stakeholders.
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