International Development Grant
Syria Crisis - Education and Health Services for Children in Jordan - UNICEF 2016
Project Number: CA-3-D003569001
Status: Closed
Country/Region:
Maximum Contribution: $31,800,000.00
Start Date: May 13, 2016
End Date: December 31, 2018
Duration: 2.6 years
Project Description
April 2016 - The humanitarian situation in Syria continues to deteriorate as a result of the civil war and intensified violence in the country. The United Nations estimates that 12.2 million people inside Syria including 5.6 million children are in need of humanitarian assistance. Combined with over 4 million Syrians seeking refuge from the conflict in neighbouring countries including Jordan this is one of the largest numbers of people displaced from conflict in the world. Women and children are particularly vulnerable to the consequences of the conflict and host countries are increasingly overstretched by the influx of people fleeing the conflict. With GAC's support the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) responds to the education and health needs of children in Jordan and Syria. Project activities include: (1) supporting up to 35 Makani centres which use a holistic approach to provide alternative education psychosocial support and life skills in Jordan and providing up to 16 000 out-of-school children with informal education opportunities life-skills and psychosocial support services; (2) providing up to 3 500 vulnerable children in Jordan currently ineligible for formal education with catch-up classes; (3) increasing education opportunities and provision of school supplies or self-learning material to up to 400 000 vulnerable children in Syria including those living in hard-to-reach and besieged areas; and (4) providing routine vaccination to approximately 800 000 conflict-affected at-risk children in Syria through a nation-wide immunization campaign.
Expected Results
The expected results for this project include: (1) improved access to formal and informal education opportunities life-skills and psychosocial support services for children in Jordan; (2) improved access for up to 3 500 vulnerable children in Jordan currently ineligible for formal education through the provision of catch-up classes; (3) improved education opportunities and access to school supplies or self-learning material for up to 400 000 vulnerable children in Syria including those living in hard-to-reach and besieged areas; and (4) the provision of routine vaccinations to approximately 800 000 conflict-affected at-risk children in Syria through a nation-wide immunization campaign. The expected ultimate outcome is lives saved suffering alleviated and human dignity maintained in countries experiencing humanitarian crisis or that are food insecure.
Key Information
Executing Agency:
UNICEF - United Nations Children's Fund
Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada
Program:
YFMInternaAssistPartnershp&Programing Br
Last Modified:
September 19, 2025
Development Classifications
DAC Sector:
Aid Type: Project-type interventions
Collaboration: Bilateral
Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation
Selection Mechanism:
Humanitarian Response