Tag Archives: child protection

How community shelters protect children and help women restore degraded lands in Niger

Community-built shelter in Tillaberi. Credit: Attou Moutari.

Washington, USA, 03 April 2026 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- Community-built shelters in Niger are enabling mothers to participate in land restoration work by providing shaded spaces for their children, protecting them from extreme heat and environmental hazards.
The initiative has led to the construction of 662 shelters across six regions, safeguarding 6,465 children and allowing women to focus on earning income and supporting their families.
This practical solution not only improves household livelihoods but also advances women’s economic empowerment, transforming a structural barrier into a pathway for resilience and community development.

The Issue: An impossible choice

In the sun-scorched landscapes of Niger, where temperatures can reach 45°C (113°F), a quiet but powerful shift is underway. It’s not just about restoring the land—it’s about enabling the women who sustain their families and communities to work safely and earn an income. A simple, community-built shelter has helped remove a barrier that kept many mothers from participating in land restoration: childcare in extreme heat.

In 2023, the Integrated Landscape Management Project (PGIP), an environment and natural resources management project financed by the World Bank through IDA credit, launched a large Cash for Work program to help rural communities restore degraded lands and build resilience to climate change. As implementation moved forward, the team saw a human hurdle: women with young children faced an impossible daily choice. Formal childcare options were scarce. Many mothers brought infants and toddlers—some as young as one year old—to the worksites, exposing them to intense sun, dust, and high winds. The risks ranged from dehydration to insect and snake bites. Mothers worried about safety and health, and their participation—and earnings—suffered.

The Solution: Community-built shelters (“hangars”)

The team listened to women and worked with local leaders to test a practical, culturally rooted solution: build shaded shelters near worksites and ask trusted “village grandmothers” to supervise the children. These hangars use local materials—wooden poles, straw, and planks—and create cool, protected spaces where children can rest and play while their mothers work nearby. Community selection of elder caregivers created trust and accountability, while keeping the model simple, affordable, and easy to maintain.

The Impact

Immediate and transformative results came quickly. To date, 662 shelters have been built across six regions, providing safe spaces for 6,465 children. By removing a basic barrier—safe childcare in extreme heat—the project unlocked women’s participation in cash-for-work activities and helped stabilize household incomes. Communities report greater peace of mind for mothers and better focus on work when children are safe and close by.

Community-built shelters are playing a pivotal role in advancing Niger’s job agenda by removing a critical barrier to women’s participation in land restoration work. By providing safe spaces for childcare, these shelters allow mothers to take part in Cash for Work programs, increasing the workforce and directly supporting household incomes. This access not only expands employment opportunities for women but also enhances their ability to contribute economically to their families and communities.

The initiative fosters skills development and community cohesion. As women are freed from the constraints of childcare during working hours, they can engage more fully in restoration activities, gaining practical experience and confidence. This strengthens their position in the labor market and promotes broader inclusion, making access to jobs more equitable and sustainable for rural communities.

Governance and sustainability

To sustain the model, existing village structures—Site Management Committees (COGES) and Grievance Redress Committees (CGP)—handle logistics, upkeep, and any concerns. This light-touch governance reinforces community ownership and keeps the shelters practical and responsive.

What’s next: Adapting and improving

The project is developing mobile shelters—lightweight, detachable units that can move with worksites as activities shift seasonally. These will remain cost-effective and compliant with environmental and social standards, with attention to child health and safety. Existing shelters will be upgraded with mats, simple toys, picture books, and water trays, making the spaces more comfortable and stimulating. “Village grandmothers” will receive basic training in child protection, hygiene, and caregiving to strengthen care quality without complicating the model.

This is a straightforward lesson in inclusive development: when we remove everyday social barriers, climate and livelihoods projects go further. In Niger’s heat, childcare became the decisive factor in women’s participation. A low-cost, community-led solution turned a risk into a result—protecting children, increasing women’s earnings, and improving the effectiveness of land restoration.

Beyond one project, the hangar model offers a practical blueprint for public works and climate resilience operations. It shows how integrating simple social measures—from trusted caregivers to grievance channels—can elevate outcomes and expand who benefits, especially in contexts of extreme heat and limited services.

This approach is affordable, replicable, and rights-respecting. Most importantly, it helps women work safely and earn, while children stay protected—an inclusive path to climate resilience that can be scaled.

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Word Bank Group.

This initiative is part of the Integrated Landscape Management Project (PGIP), which is part of the Sahel RESILAND Program and is implemented by the Government of Niger with the technical and financial support of the World Bank, PROGREEN, and PROBLUE.

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CRECCOM launches 2017-2022 strategic plan; communities urged to be proactive

By Brian Longwe

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Malawians have been asked to pay vibrant participation and self-involvement in empowering child protection and youth development in the country.

The motive has come at a time when violation of children’s human rights has reached at a climax in the country.

Recent report from International Women’s Health Coalition has revealed that 15 million girls around the world are married every year, while a population of 37,000 girls under 18 years engage into eary marriages each day.

And corresponding to the report, UNICEF has disclosed that Malawi has the 11th highest child marriage rates in the world, with nearly 1 in 2 girls married before 18.

It is for that motive that Creative Centre for Community Mobilisation (CRECCOM), one of the organisations thriving to promote girl-child education in the country has embarked on a five-year strategic plan which will run from 2017 to 2022, as said by the Board Chairperson for the organisation Dr. Foster Kholowa.

Speaking during the official launching of the strategic plan in Lilongwe, Kholowa explained that one part of the program is to build capacity and scale up its already existing activities.

This helps to yield robust positive results in the scheduled period.

“For a prolonged time, we have witnessed how Malawi is struggling with the issue of child insecurity. That’s why we came up with an idea to review and revise our operations so that we should bring new ideas to end this problem,” said Kholowa.

He further added that since its establishment in 1999, CRECCOM has been working hand in hand with Other stakeholders including chiefs, mother groups and teachers to encourage students to be proactive in their education.

Paramount Chief Kawinga(representing Yao tribe) confirmed to this reporter that the coming of CRECCOM has made a tremendous change to his people as it has mobilised change in harmful cultural practices hindering girls’ right to education.

“At first we were putting much concentration on our cultural initiations like chinamwali than education, but through civic education campaigns which CRECCOM brought, almost everyone now realise and understand the signifince of educating a girl-child.” Kawinga explained.

As one of the partner to the organisation, the ministry of civic education, culture and community development has promised to commit itself in helping CRECCOM and other organisation working on the same, fulfil their goals.

The Principle Secritary for the ministry, Ivy Luhanga who was also the guest of honour at the event made assurance that the ministry will take part in monitoring the operations to make sure that the organisations stay focused on this workload.

In its plan, CRECCOM with financial support from USAID and other global partners will see 60,000 young mothers returning back to school and 200,000 youths being trained in technical professions.