We advocate for lasting change. We believe in the power of a person’s voice and its ability to do the impossible, to battle inequality and call for justice. We relentlessly advocate for an end to violence against children and ensure the voices of the world’s most vulnerable children are heard loud and clear.
As we work alongside communities to build a better world for children, our advocacy challenges the policies, systems, structures, practices and attitudes that make it difficult for vulnerable children and their families to experience life in all its fullness.
By addressing the systemic contributors to and causes of poverty, World Vision’s advocacy work ensures that community transformation is sustainable and scalable. World Vision advocates at the local, national, regional and global levels, informed by our experience working with communities.
We believe in a future where everyone, everywhere is free from slavery, safe at work and treated with dignity. But there are more people trapped in slavery than ever before.
In New Zealand, we're connected to children, women and men trapped in slavery through the clothes we wear and the products we buy. Unlike many other countries, New Zealand has no accountability for companies creating our products. Our government can pass a law to make this happen.
It's time to make slavery in our products history. Together, we can stand against slavery in our supply chains by taking action to pass modern slavery legislation in Aotearoa New Zealand.
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In 2022, you helped launch a three-year project aimed at ending violence against children in the Solomon Islands. SIEVAP is a coalition funded by the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade with ChildFund, Save the Children and World Vision.
We're partnering with the Solomon Islands Government and local children and communities to change harmful behaviours and strengthen laws that will ensure children are safe and protected. In particular, we're advocating to raise the legal age of marriage from 15 to 18 years old in the Solomon Islands.
Did you know New Zealand’s definition of child trafficking doesn't align with the international definition? As Chair of the Human Trafficking Research Coalition, we've been advocating for New Zealand’s definition to be amended so that the prevalence of child trafficking in New Zealand can be ascertained accurately and addressed appropriately.
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We believe that a world without violence against children is possible.
As part of a five-year campaign across World Vision offices globally, we are encouraging governments and communities around the world to do more to end violence against children, highlight it when it occurs, and hold those responsible to account.
We particularly work to address the high rates of physical and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Timor Leste and Vanuatu.
This research highlights the challenges faced by Afghan nationals who resettled in Aotearoa New Zealand in 2021 following the fall of Kabul.
The report, commissioned by World Vision, Amnesty International, and Action Station, urges the New Zealand Government to provide equal support to all people who resettle for humanitarian reasons, and to develop and resource an effective crisis evacuation and resettlement model for future emergencies.
Read the full report here
In March 2022, the New Zealand Government announced the Special Ukraine Policy. While this policy allowed for 4,000 Ukrainians to enter New Zealand, World Vision was alerted to the fact that very few people were arriving.
World Vision with Mahi for Ukraine surveyed nearly 200 Ukrainians to understand current barriers to accessing the visa and produced a report with key policy recommendations for the Government.
In 2023, the Government agreed to several of the policy changes, which will allow more Ukrainians to seek safety in New Zealand.
Read the full report here
In 2019, we campaigned to change discriminatory refugee quota restrictions – and we succeeded. We called on the Government to end restrictions that blocked refugees from Africa and the Middle East settling here.
While the number of people fleeing conflict in Africa and the Middle East had increased, policy restrictions like needing family members already living in New Zealand meant since 2011, only 12 refugees from South Sudan had been allowed to resettle here.
In October 2019, the government announced they were finally scrapping the family link policy.