Health
The program seeks to advocate for adequate and improved health systems and affordable services are offered to citizens. Women and adolescent girls, sexual and reproductive health and its related issues are also key in our intervention. The program also aims at ensuring that citizens are actively involved in advocating for the prevention, treatment and cure of deadly diseases like HIV / AIDS, Malaria, TB, Cancer and other emerging epidemics as in the case of Covid 19.
Education
Education has no substitute, one is either educated or not. AID Tanzania as an advocacy and development oriented organization, our commitment and work around education and it related issues remain a priority. As a very vital component to the nation’s sustainable growth, we believe it must be embraced by all.
At AID Tanzania we are in support of the popular saying of “Education is the key to success”. Being that unduplicated key of which no door for development can be opened, it’s one of the cherished jewels that occupies major space of our work.
Human rights education
It has been discovered that the reason for the many alarming cases of abuse and violence in Schools, Homes and Communities is due to the lack of knowledge about the basic human rights and the need to respect ones rights. This Program is especially designed to address these ills of society by promoting human rights education at all levels.
Climate change
The program seeks to address issues relating to Climate Change especially in Tanzania. We strongly believe that whatever we do to tackle climate change will serve as a legacy for our future generation. Climate change and global poverty have attracted a lot of attention in recent years as key global justice challenges of our times. Both are serious challenges to the future health and prosperity of our planet.
They must be combated simultaneously; we cannot take care of one without addressing the other. An effective attack on poverty and the ill-effects of climate change requires taking comprehensive action that encompasses both issues. We cannot fight climate change without considering the rising energy needs of poor people and countries, nor can we effectively address global poverty without accounting for the impacts of climate change on agriculture, disease patterns, and violent weather events, all of which particularly impact the poorest countries.
