RREP coordinating organization
This project establishes Results for Development (R4D) as the coordinating organization for the Rapid and Responsive Evidence Partnership (RREP).
This project establishes Results for Development (R4D) as the coordinating organization for the Rapid and Responsive Evidence Partnership (RREP).
Neonatal and maternal mortality remain major challenges in sub-Saharan Africa. A skilled health workforce is an important component of preventing maternal and neonatal deaths.
Despite the well-acknowledged importance of using evidence for decision-making by many development actors, organizations in most countries are not using timely and responsive mechanisms to effectively support evidence-informed policymaking.
Despite Latin America's progress in reducing poverty, a quarter of its population still lives in poverty. The pace of reducing extreme poverty has slowed in recent years and inequalities, which are even more acute among rural households, persist.
Emergencies and displacements create major challenges to the provision of effective civil registration services such as marriages, births, and deaths.
El Salvador and Honduras are among the most violent countries in the world. In the Northern Triangle (El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala), studies estimate that more than 70,000 young people are associated with gangs.
Most deaths in sub-Saharan Africa occur without medical attention, and as a result, the causes of death (COD) remain unknown.
While Ethiopia has successfully reduced under-five childhood mortality, there have been slower gains in reducing neonatal (newborn) and maternal mortality rates. About 220,000 children and mothers die every year in Ethiopia.
This project aims to support community-based services that will improve maternal health in Ethiopia, a country with some of the worst health indicators in sub-Saharan Africa.