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Follow on Google News | Julia Gillard Becomes Patron of Camfed to Help Address Urgency and Action for Girls’ EducationBy: Camfed “Camfed has been educating girls in sub-Saharan Africa for over 23 years, and I’m a huge fan of their model,” says Julia Gillard. “Together with their vision for urgency and action in girls’ education, Camfed possesses the infrastructure, processes and partnerships to deliver real and lasting results for girls, their communities and nations. Camfed builds on local community capital, and its unique alumnae network multiplies the investment in girls, as those who have benefited invest in the education of other girls. It’s a wonderful model for growth and sustainability.” “We are absolutely thrilled and honoured that Julia is lending her support and sharing her expertise with Camfed as our patron,” says CEO Lucy Lake, “Through Camfed’s partnership with government and with communities, and through the leadership of young women who’ve completed school with our support, we can show the world just what’s possible to achieve for girls’ education.” Locally tailored, scalable solutions Julia Gillard’s action-orientated advocacy galvanises governments and resources behind the global imperative of providing access to quality education for the most marginalized children in the world, the majority of which are girls. Julia is leading concrete plans through the Global Partnership for Education, the learning metrics and progamme scaling work at Brookings, and the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunities. The Commission was set up as a practical response to the United Nations’ announcement of the new Sustainable Development Goals, a set of 17 global targets designed to eradicate extreme poverty, fight inequality, and protect our planet - none of which can be achieved without major investment in education. Today, Julia Gillard teams up with Camfed as the organisation’ Living proof of Camfed’s impact Alongside Angeline Murimirwa, 25 more young women leaders from Camfed’s pan-African alumnae network, CAMA, will also be present at the event, representing Ghana, Malawi, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia and South Africa. CAMA’s membership is set to grow to more than 130,000 within the next few years as a direct outcome of Camfed’s support for girls through secondary education. These young women – who were once too poor to access education – are now transforming opportunities for young people in their communities, and leading the way in ensuring the younger generation of girls go to school. Urgent action for today’s generation “If we do not address education and quality, we will let down not only the 121 million children currently out of school, but the 250 million children who leave without basic literacy or numeracy skills,” says Julia Gillard. “As a patron of Camfed, I will support the organisation’ Note for journalists: Camfed’s Girls’ Education and Young Women’s Leadership Symposium, by invitation only, will take place from 2 PM – 4 PM on 10 February 2016 in Johannesburg, where Camfed’s leadership is gathering for a week of strategic meetings, and will be attended by the Chair of the Board of Camfed International, Miranda Curtis. After the CEO’s address and Julia Gillard’s keynote speech, and testimonies from young women leaders, journalists will have the opportunity to participate in an informal Q&A session with Julia Gillard, Camfed’s alumnae and leadership. About Camfed Camfed is an international non-profit organisation tackling poverty and inequality by supporting girls to go to school and succeed, and empowering young women to step up as leaders of change. Camfed works in partnership with governments and communities, investing in girls and women in the poorest rural districts in sub-Saharan Africa, where girls face acute disadvantage, and where their education has transformative potential. Camfed not only supports girls and young women through school, but also on to new lives as entrepreneurs and community leaders. To complete the “virtuous cycle,” and create sustainable change, graduating students become CAMA alumnae, many of whom return to school to train and mentor new generations of students. Since 1993, Camfed has directly supported over 1.4 million children to go to school, and its innovative community-led education programmes have benefitted over 3.5 million children in Zimbabwe, Zambia, Ghana, Tanzania and Malawi. In 2014, Camfed was recognised by the OECD for best practice in taking development innovation to scale. In 2014, Camfed made an historic commitment to support one million girls in rural Africa through secondary education and into independence and leadership over just five years. Millions more children will benefit as a result. Join us at www.camfed.org End
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