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Success Stories

Oxfam Canada wants to celebrate the stories of the people whose lives have been improved as a result of the support of Oxfam Canada.  Read our success stories

Awareness raising exercise held by members of the local protection committee and womens association in Bangadi village

Renewed military action against the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) risks triggering further devastation for local people in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, and South Sudan unless more is done to protect civilians and prevent retaliations by one of Africa’s most brutal rebel groups, Oxfam and nine other international agencies and local organizations said today.

Hundreds of thousands of poor people will go without life-saving medicines and many more children will miss out on school because of the first global cuts in aid since 1997, Oxfam warned today.

Women collecting water for their vegetables. The well here is 13m deep but has a very limited quantity of water. This activity will stop in just a few days as the water dries up completely. Photo: Charles Bambara/Oxfam

Instability and conflict in Mali is deepening a regional hunger crisis in West Africa

Komudei women's group member taking money for food she has sold from her market stall in Kakuma. Image: Oxfam

Oxfam concerned about foreign aid cuts

Lift freeze on aid spending

Oxfam Canada urges the government to unfreeze foreign aid spending when it unveils the 2012 budget Thursday.

Local Dakaro child in Niger. Image: Oxfam

Humanitarian groups call for swift reinforcement of aid

Female Food Heroes

In celebration of International Women's Day and as part of the GROW campaign, Oxfam Canada is proud to celebrate and recognize Female Food Heroes.

Oxfam and other aid agencies are calling on the international community and all parties to the conflict to allow the safe delivery of aid, to protect civilians, and to respect the safety of humanitarian workers.

In the briefing note “A Shift in Focus – putting the interests of Somali people first”, Oxfam said that although responsibility for Somalia’s decades-long crisis lies first and foremost with factions inside the country, international engagement in the conflict has at times undermined relief efforts. 

Irshad Bibi, 45, fills gallon from the standing flood water, in the village of Meer Haji Khan Talpur, in Tando Allah Yaar.

Six months after floods devastated Sindh and parts of Balochistan province, at least 2.5 million Pakistanis still need help to survive, international and national aid agencies warned today. 

The coalition of agencies said that a lackluster response from international funders is seriously threatening flooded communities' chances of coping with the next monsoon season and called on the Pakistani government to boost its efforts to limit the impact of future disasters

Sustainable development: a new way of approaching economic development within environmental and social limits. Image: Oxfam

A new Oxfam report says that human deprivation and environmental degradation must be tackled together because humanity’s two major operating boundaries – “social boundaries” like hunger, inequality and ill-health and the “planetary or environmental boundaries” like climate change and biodiversity loss - are inextricably linked.

Fisher men and women in Somalia being trained in practical fishing skills, as well as reading, writing and basic mathematics

A new Oxfam report states that great strides have been made in delivery of international humanitarian assistance, but the future requires a shift of resources to ensure local governments and civil society partners are equipped to prevent, prepare for and save lives during disasters.

The following article appeared in January 26, 2012 edition of the Toronto Star

Lokomori village: Apart from the homestead walls, there are no fences on the rangelands. The Karimojong have no concept of land as a commodity which can be owned, bought and sold. Image: Oxfam

Oxfam’s focus on this case is part of the international agency’s GROW campaign, which aims to secure a future for everyone to have enough to eat. Oxfam is concerned about the accelerated rush for land, especially in Africa, and the lack of effective international rules to protect the poorest people who depend on the land for food.