Five integrated strategic pillars designed to break the cycle of poverty and empower women across Malawi.
Each pillar reinforces the others — education improves economic prospects, nutrition improves school performance, and community transformation removes the stigma that holds everything back.
Only 10% of adolescent mothers in Malawi re-enroll in school after childbirth. Our education programs directly tackle this gap by removing the structural, financial, and social barriers that keep young mothers out of education.
50% school re-enrollment rate (up from 10% baseline). 80% completion of alternative programs.
Adolescent mothers face extreme nutritional vulnerability — their bodies are still developing while supporting pregnancy and lactation. Adolescents are 2–5× more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than women aged 20–29.
Our programs address both mothers and their children, linking communities to health services and building lifelong knowledge.
Child stunting reduced from 38% to 25%. Dietary diversity improved from 22% to 60%.
Teenage mothers often face economic exclusion — lacking employable skills, financial services, productive assets, and stable livelihoods. Without economic empowerment, mothers remain trapped in poverty cycles.
Evidence shows that Village Savings & Loan Associations (VSLA) and vocational skills training significantly improve women's economic participation and resilience.
Average income MWK 8,500 → MWK 18,000/month. 70% of women in VSLA. 500 women running sustainable businesses.
Individual programs can only succeed when communities support them. Social norms around early marriage, gender inequality, and stigma against teenage mothers must shift for lasting change.
We engage traditional leaders, male partners, and community members as champions of change — recognizing their essential role in creating supportive environments for girls and young mothers.
Early marriage reduced from 42% to 25%. 80% of communities report supportive attitudes toward adolescent mothers.