What's New
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The Power of a Refugee Child’s Imagination
Right To Play works to help refugee children access the healing power of art so they can reclaim their childhood and its promise. This World Refugee Day, take a moment to learn about how we are supporting refugee children to use their imagination to express their hopes for a brighter future.
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Empowering Teachers for More Resilient Children
Right To Play empowers teachers with child-centred techniques and approaches that bring out students’ best. Along with upgrading teachers’ skills, we work with ministries of education to create curricula that grab children’s attention and promote their ability to learn.
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How Youth Are Using Music to Promote Social Change in Lebanon
Every week, these refugee children know they’ll have a safe space where they are able to gather, talk about the challenges they face, find support from their peers, and express their emotions through music – at a Music for Social Change session, organized by Right To Play and led by the children themselves.
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Promoting Sexual and Reproductive Rights for Young Adults
In Partnership with FAWE and WaterAid, and technical support from FHI 360, we are launching the SHARE project to support sexual and reproductive health and rights for adolescent youth in Ghana, Mozambique, and Uganda.
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Right To Play to increase access to quality education for close to 40,000 internally displaced children in Mali
At a time when the worldwide number of refugees and internally displaced persons is at an 80-year high, Right To Play is renewing its longstanding commitment to refugee education with the launch of a new program that will increase access to quality, play-based education to close to 40,000 internally displaced children in Mali.
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Building a Foundation for Literacy
School closures in Mozambique threatened to set back children's educational progress. While schools were closed, literacy clubs helped them practice reading safely and regularly. Now that schools have reopened, the clubs help children build on lessons and strengthen their academic skills as they catch up for lost time.
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How Saving a Seat Helps a Girl Claim Her Future
Every girl should have a bright future. An education that empowers her is the start of that future. But around the world, girls are facing tough challenges to claiming the futures they deserve. This International Women’s Day, we are inviting you to learn about and celebrate some of the young women Right To Play has supported as they overcame incredible challenges to claim a brighter future for themselves, their families, and their communities.
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A Child’s Voice Can Save a Life: WASH Clubs in Uganda
In Uganda, we're using games to teach children learn how to properly wash their hands and prevent the spread of infection, forming local clubs that engage the country's most vulnerable children.
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