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Save the Children India
Save the Children India
from Wikipedia

Bal Raksha Bharat (English: Child Protection India), commonly known as Save the Children India, is a non-profit organization working to improve the lives of marginalized children in India since 2008. Headquartered in Gurugram, and registered as Bal Raksha Bharat in India (under Societies Registration Act, 1861), the organization is a member of Save the Children International (formerly known as the International Save The Children Alliance)[2]

Key Information

While Save the Children has been working in India since the 1940s, Save the Children India formally came into being as Bal Raksha Bharat in April 2008. Since then it has reached 10.1 million children. The organization implements sustainable, community-driven projects across India from remote locations to urban areas. The goal of these projects is to provide children with quality education and healthcare, protection from harm and abuse, and life-saving aid during emergencies.

Bal Raksha Bharat also works through Advocacy and Campaigning, liaising with government stakeholders and civil society in support of children’s rights.

History

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As World War I drew to an end in 1919, Eglantyne Jebb launched a movement named Save the Children Fund to cater to the needs of children whose lives were affected by the war. She was driven by the belief that all children have the right to a healthy, happy, and fulfilling life. Three years later in 1922, she drafted a document named ‘Declaration of the Rights of the Child’. The declaration contained a number of proclamations intended to provide and safeguard certain universal rights for children. It was this declaration that would become the axis around which the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) would revolve.

In 1924, the League of Nations, the precursor to the United Nations adopted Jebb’s declaration. What started as an emergency relief fund went on to become a major worldwide movement for protecting the rights of children. The first connection between Save the Children and India was made when Mahatma Gandhi signed Jebb’s declaration in 1931.[3]

In the early 1940s, when World War II broke out, Save the Children provided relief and rehabilitation to the affected children.[4] Hundreds of thousands of children received relief in the form of clothing and shoes. More than 800,000 books were distributed in schools. In India, a child welfare centre in Kolkata was supported and this marked the entry of the organization in India. After the war ended, Save the Children began work with displaced children, refugees and concentration camp survivors in the devastated areas of France, Yugoslavia, Greece, Austria, and Poland.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Save the Children worked extensively in Asia. Children affected by the Korean War were provided essential relief. In 2004, when a devastating Tsunami struck the South-East coast of India, Save the Children provided a rapid relief response that continued for several months.[5] Four years later, in April 2008, Save the Children started functioning as an independent Indian member of the Save the Children International Alliance under the name Bal Raksha Bharat.

Campaigns

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#EveryLastChild

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In 2016, Save the Children launched a global campaign to reach out to the most excluded and forgotten children in the world through advocacy, fundraising and program work [6]

(1). The defined objectives for the campaign were: a fair chance for all children should be there, all children should be treated equally and there should be accountability which can be great to children.

Bal Raksha Bharat reached around 700,000 children as a part of this campaign.

#TheInvisibles

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Through #TheInvisibles campaign, Bal Raksha Bharat sought to address the most vital issues of children living in street situations [7]

(2). The organization believes that these are perhaps the most deprived children in India, who are all around us yet “invisibles”, that is their issues and needs are often ignored. Through this campaign, the organization worked to address the biggest problem these children face – lack of identity. This was done by the means of providing them an Aadhaar Card and linking them to various government programs.

#Vote4Children

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This is another hallmark campaign of the organization which has been rolled out twice: in the run to 2014 and 2019 General Elections in India [8]

(3). Through the campaign, Save the Children prepared a Children’s Manifesto which is a Charter of Demands children have from their political representatives. This manifesto was presented by children in Save the Children’s intervention areas to MPs, MLAs and politicians of various constituencies. An online petition encouraging people to support the campaign was also floated.

In 2019, the organization entered its 100th year globally. Bal Raksha Bharat will focus on mobilizing commitments, partners, and resources for seven “Big Ideas” and contribute towards India’s progress for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals 2030.[9]

The seven Big Ideas are:

  1. Pneumonia: The Forgotten Killer
  2. Undernutrition: A Silent Emergency
  3. Children are Ready for School
  4. Ending Violence Against Children
  5. Rights for Children in Street Situations
  6. Resilient and Climate-Smart Children
  7. Triple Dividend of Investing in Adolescents

Awards and recognition

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NGO Felicitation and Wish Realization Award 2016 by ZEE TV: Save the Children was selected as the ‘Best NGO working on Child Rights in Rajasthan’ for the prestigious Zee TV’s ‘NGO Felicitation and Wish Realization Awards 2016’. The organization was selected out of 250 NGOs working on children’s issues in Rajasthan through an impact review and nominations.

Campaigns

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  • #TheInvisibles campaign for Street Children was shortlisted among 60 best campaigns in South Asia for Social Media For Empowerment Awards
  • #KidsNotForSale campaign on Child Trafficking was shortlisted for the Best Viral Marketing Campaign at India Digital Awards and for New York Advertising Awards

Awards to Child Champions

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  • 12 Child Champions of Save the Children selected as Ashoka Youth Venturers.
  • Save the Children’s Child Chfn for Sustainable Development Goals 2030 and went on to attend the United Nations General Assembly meeting in September 2018 in New York. She was also awarded the Savitri Bai Phule Award by the Government of India.
  • Youth Champion Shalini from Odisha was awarded the UN Volunteer award as part of Youth Affairs and Sports Ministry's initiative. She will also be attending the Women Deliver 2019 Conference in Canada in June 2019.
  • Youth Advocate from West Bengal, Anoyara Khatun was conferred the prestigious Nari Shakti Award by the President of India.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat since its full rebranding in 2023, is the Indian affiliate of the international movement, a dedicated to protecting and advancing through targeted interventions in , , , , and humanitarian response. Founded in India in 2004 and formally registered as Bal Raksha Bharat in 2008 under the Societies Registration Act, it addresses systemic challenges facing vulnerable children, including , exploitation, and disasters, by partnering with local communities, governments, and donors to foster holistic development. The organization operates across 15 states and union territories, emphasizing evidence-based programs that prioritize empirical outcomes over symbolic efforts, such as enrolling and retaining children in quality systems, providing essential healthcare to newborns and adolescents, and safeguarding against , labor, early , and trafficking. In 2022-23 alone, it supported 3.3 children in initiatives, reached 3.4 through and services, aided 6.2 in humanitarian crises, and assisted over 10,000 at-risk youth in protection efforts, contributing to a cumulative impact on more than 1 children over 15 years. While its work aligns with national priorities like inclusive learning and resilience-building, independent evaluations of NGO efficacy in highlight the need for rigorous, causal assessments of long-term outcomes amid broader critiques of sector-wide administrative overheads and dependency risks, though specific data on Bal Raksha Bharat's cost-effectiveness remains tied primarily to self-reported metrics. No major scandals or regulatory violations have been substantiated in credible governmental or peer-reviewed sources, distinguishing it from periodic foreign faced by other child-focused entities under India's FCRA regime.

History

Early International Involvement in India

Save the Children's operational presence in India commenced in the 1940s, initially as part of the international organization's humanitarian response to children impacted by , famines, and pre-independence instability. This period saw the extension of relief efforts from Europe to Asia, focusing on immediate aid for , displacement, and basic survival needs among vulnerable child populations in regions like , where wartime disruptions exacerbated food shortages. The foundational ideological link predated these activities, stemming from Eglantyne Jebb's 1923 Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child, which advocated universal protections later influencing global child welfare standards and Save the Children's expansion into colonial territories. By the mid-1940s, targeted interventions in addressed acute crises, including orphan care and support, amid an estimated 3 million child deaths from the 1943 Bengal famine alone, though direct organizational records emphasize broader advocacy over isolated event responses. In the immediate post-independence era, Save the Children's programs shifted toward sustained child welfare, tackling rates of around 148 per 1,000 live births in 1951—a figure reflecting limited access to , vaccines, and in a exceeding 360 million. These initiatives complemented India's First Five-Year Plan (1951–1956), which allocated resources for community health centers and maternal-child services to boost survival rates, with the organization providing supplemental distribution and welfare centers in urban areas like to mitigate ongoing partition-related displacements affecting millions of children. Such efforts prioritized empirical outcomes like reduced under-five mortality through targeted interventions, rather than expansive infrastructure, in line with the era's resource constraints and high disease burdens from and .

Establishment as Independent Entity

Save the Children India was formally established as an independent in April 2008, registered under the name Bal Raksha Bharat pursuant to the Societies Registration Act, 1860. This registration occurred amid the operational framework of the alliance, where national affiliates function as autonomous entities to adapt programs to local contexts while adhering to global child rights standards. The move enabled greater regulatory compliance with Indian laws, including those governing foreign contributions and societal registrations, shifting from earlier international-led implementations in dating back to the 1940s. The establishment emphasized child rights advocacy tailored to India's demographic challenges, including a youth bulge representing a potential overshadowed by vulnerabilities such as widespread child labor. Government census data from 2001 estimated 12.6 million children aged 5-14 engaged in labor, highlighting the urgency for localized interventions to combat exploitation in sectors like and . Bal Raksha Bharat's initial operations focused on transitioning from dependency on international funding streams to self-sustained, community-embedded efforts, commencing projects across 13 states and union territories, including Jammu and Kashmir, , , , , and . This setup prioritized building domestic partnerships and capacity for long-term , distinct from ad-hoc global aid responses.

Key Milestones and Rebranding

Bal Raksha Bharat, formerly operating under the banner, marked its independent establishment in April 2008 following separation from the international parent organization to comply with India's Foreign Contribution Regulation Act. Post-2008, it progressively scaled operations to cover 19 states and 3 union territories, prioritizing child rights advocacy and community-based interventions. By 2022, the organization reported directly impacting over 11 million children through sustained programmatic reach. A pivotal response milestone emerged in amid the outbreak, when Bal Raksha Bharat deployed efforts, including provision of oxygen supplies, healthcare equipment, and rehabilitation support targeting 1 million children across affected regions. This initiative underscored adaptive , building on prior disaster preparedness frameworks. In July 2023, the entity underwent , prominently adopting the Bal Raksha Bharat name with a new "Bharat" developed over a year-long process, intended to culturally resonate with Indian values of ("Bal Raksha" translating to child safeguard) while maintaining global affiliations. Recent expansions included the August 2024 launch of the Tikau Fashion project in Bengaluru, a collaboration with Foundation emphasizing models for textile and youth skill-building among urban communities. These milestones paralleled India's broader child welfare gains, such as the under-5 halving from 88 per 1,000 live births in 2000 to 41 in 2020, attributable chiefly to scaled government measures like nationwide vaccination campaigns and sanitation infrastructure under programs such as Swachh Bharat. Such national trends highlight that NGO expansions, though contributory at localized scales, unfold within a dominant framework of state-driven causal factors reducing child vulnerabilities.

Organizational Structure and Governance

Leadership and Operations

The Governing Council, responsible for strategic oversight and policy direction, is chaired by , a former Chairman and CEO of India, and comprises exclusively Indian nationals with backgrounds in corporate leadership, , , and child rights. Key members include Treasurer Rajiv Kapur, a veteran international banker with extensive experience in and ; Stuti Narain Kacker, a retired IAS and former Chairperson of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights; and Rawal, an actress and education advocate. This composition reflects the organization's independence since its registration as Bal Raksha Bharat in 2008, with decision-making localized to minimize direct international oversight from the affiliated network. Executive operations are led by CEO Santanu Chakraborty, appointed on September 26, 2024, who previously held roles at , CARE India, and , focusing on humanitarian response and child rights implementation. Supporting him is a senior team of directors handling , , , and external engagement, most with 20+ years in 's nonprofit and development sectors, such as Subhashish Neogi in and legal compliance. The council approves major decisions, while the CEO and directors manage daily execution through functional silos, emphasizing accountability via internal governance frameworks. Headquartered in Gurugram, , the organization maintains a decentralized structure with field operations across 16 states and 3 union territories as of 2024, prioritizing delivery over top-down advocacy. It employs around 700 staff, supplemented by community volunteers for on-ground activities, enabling adaptive responses in remote and urban areas. Operational metrics, including state-level reach reported in annual documents like the 2022-23 review covering 15 states and 3 union territories, derive from self-conducted audits, lacking routine independent external validation beyond .

Focus Areas and Strategic Priorities

Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat, prioritizes child survival, protection from exploitation and violence, access to quality , and interventions, humanitarian response in emergencies, and emerging areas such as skill-building, livelihoods, and preparedness. These efforts align with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), emphasizing a rights-based approach that positions children as rights-holders rather than passive beneficiaries. The organization's strategic priorities center on achieving systemic change by 2030, aiming for universal child survival, learning, and through evidence-based programming, child participation, gender equity, and partnerships with government, communities, and corporates. Key themes include addressing undernutrition, ending , promoting school readiness, enhancing adolescent agency, and building , with targeted interventions in underserved remote and urban areas where state reach is limited. Strategically, the organization has evolved from primarily service-delivery models focused on immediate survival needs toward a broader rights-based framework, incorporating innovation in financing, technical expertise, and influence since its strategies outlined in 2019. This shift reflects global UNCRC influences and responds to India's growing emphasis on , though it necessitates coordination with national programs like the (ICDS) to mitigate potential duplication of efforts in nutrition and early childhood care. While proponents highlight the value in filling implementation gaps in marginalized regions, critics argue that uncoordinated NGO activities can fragment resources and undermine government-led scaling.

Programs and Initiatives

Child Protection and Rights

Save the Children India conducts initiatives to combat child labor by promoting awareness campaigns, facilitating rescues, and supporting rehabilitation for affected children, particularly in high-risk sectors such as domestic work and . These efforts include community-level interventions to identify and withdraw children from exploitative conditions, often in collaboration with local authorities. The organization addresses child trafficking through prevention programs that target vulnerable migrant families and border areas, emphasizing early identification, rescue operations with , and post-rescue counseling to reintegrate victims. Partnerships with police and child welfare committees aim to strengthen reporting mechanisms and prosecutions under relevant laws, though implementation challenges persist due to underreporting and constraints in rural regions. To prevent child marriage, Save the Children India runs advocacy drives and community mobilization efforts, focusing on delaying marriages among adolescent girls in states like and by providing legal aid and counseling to families. These programs advocate for stricter enforcement of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006, alongside tracking at-risk cases through local networks. In parallel, the organization highlights vulnerabilities of , with an internal study across five Indian cities revealing that over 80% lack any form of identification, impeding access to protection services and legal safeguards. Initiatives seek to address this by assisting in documentation and linking children to government schemes for identity proofs. Save the Children India also advocates for enhanced implementation of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, through training for stakeholders and public awareness to report sexual exploitation, though conviction rates remain low at around 30% nationally due to evidentiary and judicial bottlenecks. Empirical evaluations indicate limited attributable impact from such NGO efforts on broader trends; for instance, child labor declined by approximately 60%, from 12.6 million children aged 5-14 in 2001 to 4.5 million in 2011 per National Sample Survey Organisation data, primarily driven by economic expansion, rising household incomes, and policies rather than isolated interventions. This decline correlates more strongly with —India's GDP per capita rose over 200% in the decade—and school enrollment gains than with NGO-specific programs, underscoring the dominance of macroeconomic and policy factors in causal chains.

Education and Development

Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat, implements programs aimed at enhancing access to quality learning and skill development for children in underserved rural and urban areas, with a focus on foundational , , and vocational skills. In the 2022-23, these initiatives reached over 330,000 children through interventions such as bridge courses to reintegrate out-of-school youth and community-based learning centers. Programs emphasize inclusive for marginalized groups, including children from waste-picker communities and those with disabilities, partnering with local schools to improve enrollment and retention. A key component involves STEM () education tailored for low-income settings, incorporating hands-on activities and teacher training to foster critical thinking and innovation among participants aged 3 to 18. These efforts target dropout prevention by addressing barriers like and inadequate infrastructure, though they operate within a national context where India's overall literacy rate rose from 65.38% in the 2001 census to an estimated 77.7% by 2021 according to National Statistical Office data, reflecting broader governmental investments in universal elementary via schemes like . While the organization's child rights-based approach promotes student participation and empowerment, it has drawn limited scrutiny for potentially embedding progressive ideologies that de-emphasize traditional disciplinary structures in favor of rights-centric models, which critics argue may undermine and academic rigor in resource-constrained environments. Such frameworks, common in international NGOs, prioritize holistic development but risk diluting focus on measurable skill acquisition amid India's evolving landscape. Independent evaluations of similar programs highlight the need for rigorous outcome tracking to distinguish NGO contributions from national trends.

Health, Nutrition, and Survival

Save the Children India implements health and nutrition programs emphasizing screening, neonatal care, and overall child survival through partnerships with government health systems and community awareness initiatives. In the 2022-23, the organization provided healthcare support to 3.4 children across multiple states, contributing to broader efforts in early detection and treatment of nutritional deficiencies. These interventions include strengthening local health infrastructure for and management of conditions like birth , as demonstrated in projects in supported by USAID. The organization's work aligns with national priorities such as supporting the POSHAN Abhiyaan scheme, which focuses on reducing stunting and prevalence through community-based services, though direct attributions of outcomes to NGO efforts remain limited by scale relative to implementation. indicates that child survival improvements in stem primarily from systemic factors, including and enhancements, rather than isolated NGO programs. Historically, faced high under-5 mortality, with nearly 2 million child deaths annually reported around 2009, prompting campaigns like the 2014 'Giggle of Life' initiative by to mobilize action for preventing such losses. Subsequent national declines— a 78% reduction in under-5 mortality from 1990 to 2023—have outpaced global and regional averages, driven by government-led efforts including the , which averted an estimated 60,000 to 70,000 infant deaths yearly via reduced and diarrheal disease incidence. While NGOs provide targeted aid, underscores and policy-scale interventions as dominant factors in these gains.

Humanitarian and Emergency Response

Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat, has conducted emergency responses to including cyclones and floods, providing assessments, essential supplies, and support to affected children and families. In response to in May 2020, the organization deployed humanitarian teams to evaluate damage in coastal areas of and , focusing on amid evacuations of nearly one million people. Similarly, during in May 2019, it highlighted risks to at least 350,000 children in and supported government-led evacuations to cyclone shelters. For floods and landslides, such as those in eastern in 2022 and in August 2024, the group aided 2,500 households with relief items, complementing larger-scale governmental operations under India's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). During the , Save the Children India's emergency efforts included distributing informational leaflets on prevention in urban slums like and , addressing immediate risks of exposure and isolation for vulnerable children. The organization warned of potential surges in and hunger, estimating millions at risk due to the 2021 case spike, while advocating for child-centric safeguards amid lockdowns affecting and in areas like . These interventions remained supplementary to national health responses led by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, reaching limited urban pockets rather than nationwide scales. In addressing heatwaves, particularly the severe 2024 event with temperatures reaching 50°C in northern , Save the Children India issued calls for government action to protect children from and disrupted schooling, urging comprehensive measures like enhanced cooling and reforms. It emphasized the need for child-focused heat action plans in states like , , and , where extreme conditions curtailed outdoor activities and exacerbated vulnerabilities for low-income families. Innovative approaches include piloting drone deliveries in Himachal Pradesh's starting July 2024, enabling aid like food, water, and medical supplies to remote, flood-prone communities inaccessible by road. This initiative, a first for the organization in , builds on post-2023 flood renovations of health facilities and aims to enhance rapid response in mountainous terrains. Additionally, efforts toward climate-resilient infrastructure, such as cyclone-proof storage and school adaptations, support disaster preparedness, though implementation remains localized and integrated with community-level risk reduction rather than replacing national frameworks. Overall, these responses operate on a supplementary scale to India's NDMA-coordinated disaster management, which mobilizes vast resources for evacuations and relief across millions, with NGOs like focusing on child-specific gaps in 20 states amid broader governmental primacy.

Major Campaigns

Awareness and Advocacy Efforts

Save the Children India has utilized hashtags and digital campaigns to raise public visibility on the challenges faced by marginalized children, including those in street situations and unregistered populations. These efforts emphasize and content to engage audiences, often partnering with media outlets for broader dissemination. The #EveryLastChild campaign, launched on April 26, 2016, sought to spotlight two million excluded children in , targeting groups such as 500,000 unregistered children affected by , remoteness, and . The initiative deployed global messaging adapted locally to highlight barriers preventing access to essential services. Similarly, the #TheInvisibles campaign focused on street-connected children, aiming to document and publicize their living conditions through surveys and virtual experiences like "A Lens on ." A 2020 telethon collaboration with during the lockdown featured live updates to draw attention to these children's vulnerabilities, garnering celebrity support including from actress . The associated #TheInvisibles achieved national trending status at number one, with reach exceeding 160 million accounts via chats and digital amplification. Additional visibility drives included the 2020 #SaveWithStories effort, where Bollywood celebrities narrated children's stories on to underscore risks to marginalized groups amid the . Earlier, the 2012 Every One campaign leveraged celebrity endorsements and media slots to publicize statistics, securing approximately 100,000 public pledges within three weeks of launch. Campaign metrics, primarily self-reported by the organization, highlight engagement through impressions and trends, though causal connections to sustained behavioral or systemic shifts in child welfare remain unquantified in available evaluations.

Policy Influence Campaigns

Save the Children India launched the #Vote4Children campaign to elevate children's issues in electoral politics, beginning with the 2014 general elections in partnership with Youth Ki Awaaz, where it collected pledges from candidates committing to child-focused priorities such as ending labor and improving access to . The initiative emphasized that children constitute a significant demographic—over 12 million workers per official estimates, potentially up to 60 million according to NGOs—and sought to ensure political agendas reflect their demands rather than marginalize them. Subsequent iterations, including for the 2019 general elections and state polls in 2020, involved consulting children across at least 10 states to draft Children's Manifestos, which outlined specific policy asks like enhanced mechanisms and inclusive development. These documents were presented to political stakeholders to advocate for integrating into party platforms and , aiming to shift toward long-term electoral on issues like , , and participation. In parallel, the organization has engaged in advocacy for legislative reforms to grant identity documentation to street children, citing data from a multi-city study showing over 80% lack any ID, impeding access to basic services and rights. Through initiatives like the Invisibles project, completed in 2020 across 10 low-income cities, Save the Children liaised with government bodies to facilitate Aadhaar issuance for approximately 200,000 street children, while pressing for policy changes to recognize their legal status without requiring traditional proofs of address or parentage. This effort highlighted systemic barriers, such as exclusion from national ID systems, and sought broader regulatory adjustments to enable mainstreaming into welfare schemes. While these campaigns have contributed to public and political awareness—evidenced by manifesto adoptions in electoral rhetoric—critics, including some Indian policymakers, have questioned the role of internationally affiliated NGOs in shaping domestic agendas, perceiving them as externally driven influences on policy priorities despite the organization's local operations since 2008. No direct causal links to specific legislative enactments, such as increased child budget allocations, have been empirically attributed to these efforts, though the group routinely analyzes and critiques government spending, as in studies on funding at 0.1% of GDP.

Impact and Achievements

Self-Reported Outcomes

Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat following its 2023 rebranding, reported reaching over 10 million children across India in its first 15 years of operations since 2008. In the 2022-23, the organization claimed to have directly benefited 1.38 million children through programs spanning 15 states. For calendar year 2023, self-reported figures indicated a total reach of 717,057 children, with interventions focused on survival, protection, development, and participation rights. In education initiatives, Save the Children India stated that its programs assisted over 330,000 children in 2022-23, including foundational learning support and school reintegration efforts. Specific projects, such as the initiative, reached 10,242 children while training over 1,000 teachers in comprehensive school safety across 300 schools. The organization also reported upgrading 50 schools and anganwadis under partnerships like the Foundation project, benefiting 9,300 children and increasing teacher training coverage from 24% to 92%. Mobile learning centers in engaged 193 children, mainstreaming 19 into formal schooling. Health and nutrition efforts reportedly supported 340,000 children in 2022-23, with 208,993 children benefiting in 2023 through strengthened systems and maternal-child interventions. The MCHN-SHAHI project exceeded targets by reaching 10,290 beneficiaries, including 878 pregnant women and 2,039 under-five children, while training over 9,600 workers. Under the Ayushman Bharat initiative, 200 health and wellness centers were fortified, serving over 1.45 million and boosting patient footfall by 58%. care programs improved IDELA scores from 29.8% to 66.4% for 591 children. Child protection programs claimed to safeguard 59,785 children in 2023, easing risks for over 10,000 at-risk in the prior year. Cyber safety awareness reached approximately 40,000 children, with notable gains in teacher understanding of online risks. Multi-activity centers reintegrated 360 children into education and linked 860 beneficiaries to schemes. Humanitarian responses in 2022-23 aided over 620,000 children in disaster zones, including flood relief in that distributed 1,085 food kits, 1,295 hygiene kits, and 1,646 shelter kits to 25,000 people while revamping 10 primary facilities. Poverty and inclusion efforts supported 258,143 children in 2023, with broader initiatives like Smartpur connecting 556,129 to financial banking services and facilitating over ₹1.1 billion in transactions. Skill development programs empowered over 200,000 individuals toward self-reliance.

Empirical Evaluations and Government Context

Independent evaluations of Save the Children India's programs remain limited, with most available assessments funded by partners or conducted internally, such as endline reports on initiatives supported by corporate donors like , which measured improvements in learning outcomes but lacked broader causal attribution to the NGO's interventions independent of national trends. Third-party audits focusing on overall effectiveness or long-term impact are scarce, contrasting with the abundance of self-reported metrics; this gap underscores challenges in verifying NGO-specific contributions amid India's evolving child welfare landscape. National data from the (NFHS) illustrate substantial progress in child nutrition metrics, with stunting among children under five declining from 38.4% in NFHS-4 (2015-16) to 35.5% in NFHS-5 (2019-21), alongside reductions in prevalence from 35.8% to 32.1% and from 21.0% to 19.3%. These improvements align closely with government-led initiatives, including the (ICDS) scheme, which provides supplementary nutrition and health services to over 80 million beneficiaries, and the Mid-Day Meal Scheme, serving more than 120 million schoolchildren daily to enhance enrollment and combat through fortified meals. since the 1990s has further supported these gains by boosting household incomes, agricultural productivity, and access to diverse foods, with sanitation drives like Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan reducing from 60% in 2014 to near elimination by 2019, thereby addressing underlying causes of stunting such as infections and poor absorption. While NGOs like Save the Children India operate in implementation gaps, such as in underserved areas, empirical trends favor state-driven over fragmented NGO efforts; collaborations exist, but schemes demonstrate greater reach and sustained outcomes, as evidenced by accelerated reductions in child mortality and morbidity under programs like Poshan Abhiyaan, which targets micronutrient deficiencies via anganwadi centers nationwide. This context challenges narratives of NGO indispensability, highlighting India's self-reliance in child welfare through policy reforms and public investment, which have outpaced donor-dependent models in addressing root causes like and deficits.

Criticisms and Controversies

Regulatory Scrutiny and FCRA Issues

In August 2023, India's Ministry of Home Affairs revoked the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) registration of Bal Raksha Bharat, the operational entity of in , prohibiting it from receiving foreign funding. The decision came amid allegations of regulatory violations, including unauthorized activities that raised concerns over compliance with FCRA provisions on foreign contributions and their intended use. The revocation stemmed directly from scrutiny of Bal Raksha Bharat's 2022 campaign targeting in tribal areas, where the organization solicited public donations of ₹800 per contributor to support affected children. In November 2022, the Ministry of Women and Child Development issued directives to states to investigate such appeals, citing potential misuse of funds without requisite permissions from relevant authorities like the tribal affairs ministry. The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights further criticized the campaign in December 2022 for exploiting images of vulnerable children in fundraising efforts, violating guidelines under the Juvenile Justice Act and norms. This case aligns with the Indian government's intensified enforcement of FCRA since 2020 amendments, which mandate stricter utilization rules for foreign donations—such as confining them to designated bank accounts and prohibiting administrative diversions—to curb potential foreign influence on and prevent funds from supporting activities beyond stated charitable objectives. Over 20,000 NGO registrations have been canceled or not renewed since 2014, often for similar compliance lapses, reflecting a emphasis on and amid perceptions of NGOs as conduits for external agendas. Bal Raksha Bharat's prior international affiliations, including Save the Children's global operations, have prompted questions about impartiality in conflict zones like Gaza, where the parent entity faced accusations of biased favoring certain narratives, though no ties this to the Indian revocation.

Effectiveness and Operational Critiques

Critiques of India's effectiveness highlight the predominance of output-focused evaluations over rigorous causal assessments, with few randomized controlled trials (RCTs) demonstrating long-term impact on child outcomes. Partner-funded studies, such as those in child labor prevention, report gains in school enrollment—reaching over 3,000 at-risk children with 94% attendance rates—but reveal gaps in monitoring actual reductions in working hours or forced labor, particularly among homeworkers where record-keeping is poor and cultural norms persist. These limitations stem from short project timelines (e.g., two years for multifaceted goals) and inadequate systematic verification, underscoring challenges in attributing sustained behavioral changes amid entrenched poverty. In anti-trafficking initiatives like the Program to End Modern (PEMS), operational evaluations note early successes in stakeholder training—such as police and prosecutors in , leading to heightened buyer deterrence (60-81% perceived risk in intervention areas versus 52% in controls)—yet is tempered by methodological weaknesses, including non-representative sampling, high attrition in studies, and pandemic-induced disruptions to victim services. Interim data supports reduced vulnerabilities to through and awareness, but incomplete datasets and lack of pre-pandemic baselines hinder robust claims of scalability or cost superiority over government-led efforts. Operational issues further compound these concerns, including insufficient survivor input in program design, which risks misalignment with on-ground needs, and delivery barriers like mismatches and trust gaps in materials for local officials. While the defends its scale—reaching millions via partnerships—defenders overlook empirical voids, such as unproven marginal benefits relative to India's state programs (e.g., in via ICDS), where NGO duplication may dilute resources without evidenced additive value. Anecdotal forum discussions allege poor volunteer leading to unintended harms, but these remain unverified by independent audits. Overall, the absence of high-quality, comparative RCTs prioritizes caution in assessing net impact, favoring investments in evidence-building over assumed efficacy.

Funding and Financial Transparency

Revenue Sources

Save the Children India, operating as Bal Raksha Bharat since its rebranding in 2023, historically derived a significant portion of its revenue from foreign contributions channeled through its international affiliates under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA). These funds supported child welfare programs prior to the revocation of its FCRA registration in August 2023, which prohibited further receipt of foreign donations. Following the FCRA cancellation, the organization shifted toward domestic revenue streams, emphasizing individual donations and (CSR) contributions. In 2023-24, individual giving exceeded mobilization targets by 3%, reflecting growth in donor acquisition and retention efforts. Corporate partnerships numbered 32, including entities such as , HCL Foundation, and , which funded CSR-linked projects like disaster response initiatives. Additional income originates from domestic grants acquired from prominent organizations and contributions from other agencies, which increased by 7% in the same period. Government grants remain limited, primarily manifesting through project-based collaborations with departments such as Health and Family Welfare and Women and , rather than direct allocations. Overall for 2023-24 surpassed revised projections by 2%, underscoring adaptation to localized funding models. Financial transparency is maintained through annual reports and, for prior years, FCRA filings, detailing these sources without itemized breakdowns of foreign versus domestic proportions post-revocation.

Expenditure and Accountability

Save the Children India's financial allocation prioritizes program services, with global organizational data indicating that approximately 84% of total expenditures support direct child welfare initiatives, while the remainder covers administration and fundraising. In its Indian operations, a 2015 annual report documented 88% of expenses directed to program services and 12% to general administration, including audit fees and office costs. Fundraising efficiency metrics from the parent organization reveal a cost of $20 to generate every $100 in contributions, reflecting structured overhead in donor engagement efforts. Accountability mechanisms include annual audited financial statements, which the organization publishes to demonstrate compliance with regulatory standards. However, the revocation of its Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) registration by the Indian Ministry of Home Affairs in August 2023—triggered by scrutiny over a 2022 campaign—exposed potential lapses in foreign fund utilization and reporting. This action, part of broader government enforcement against NGOs for alleged misuse, underscores limitations in internal oversight and has prompted reliance on domestic CSR funding, with calls from observers for enhanced independent third-party evaluations to verify expenditure integrity. Evaluations of value-for-money highlight contrasts with government programs like the (ICDS), which delivers nutrition and preventive care to millions at lower per-child costs—estimated at ₹11,601 to avert stunting in one analysis—due to scaled infrastructure and minimal fundraising overhead. NGO models, including India's, often incur higher administrative burdens, potentially reducing net efficiency despite targeted interventions, as administrative percentages exceed those in public schemes optimized for mass reach. Such comparisons suggest that while audits provide baseline transparency, empirical scrutiny of outcomes relative to costs remains essential to affirm donor impact over duplicative efforts.

References

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