Transitioning to

Partnerships

The Foundation is expanding its portfolio of partnerships though building strategic alliances with both public and private sector entities, membership associations and implementing projects and programs in partnership with institutional donors. With all these new partnerships and strategic alliances, HDF is propelling towards expanding its programs and building new ones to serve the underserved communities better.

At the Foundation, we strive to address complex human development challenges which do not fit to demarcated sectors. Impactful and sustainable development requires partnerships between civil society, private sector and the government. Multi-stakeholder partnerships help mobilize and share knowledge, technical expertise, technology and financial resources to achieve sustainable development in the regions which are underdeveloped and subsequently contribute to the national development goals.

Strong cooperation is needed now more than ever to ensure the means to recover from the pandemic, build back better and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.
A successful development agenda requires inclusive partnerships — at the global, regional, national and local levels.
Partnerships must be built upon principles, values, shared vision and shared goals placing people and the planet at the centre.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the global economy was projected to contract sharply, by 3%, in 2020, experiencing its worst recession since the Great Depression.

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Testimonials

Emergency Response – News & Events

Pregnant women caught in Pakistan’s floods left struggling for maternal healthcare.

Some 650,000 pregnant women in flood-hit provinces are affected by maternal malnutrition, with about 2,000 mothers giving birth in unsafe conditions daily. Unregulated use of medicines, untrained birth attendants, and lack of access to health facilities and hospitals are among the problems post-floods.

Pakistani health worker Mai Janat Buriro, 37, spends three hours daily handing out medicines to pregnant women with iron deficiency or malnutrition in the flood-affected province of Sindh. Of the 11 mothers who gave birth last month in her neighbourhood in the Allah Rakha colony, three who suffered from maternal malnutrition lost their infants.

“Most pregnant women have nothing to eat,” Buriro told This Week In Asia. “They don’t have access to milk either because animals they reared had died in the floods.”

Over the past several months, devastating floods have killed more than 1,500 people and displaced 7.6 million people.

HDF Emergency & Response Team

Volunteer/Social Worker - Sindh

volunteers testimonial

We feel great pleasure in saying that we have worked with this organization in many successful projects including ASER Pakistan Survey 2013. With such an amazing work experience, we strongly recommend HDF for the subject Prize and wish them luck for their future endeavors to bring about lasting solutions to end multifaceted poverty in Pakistan and across the globe.

Waqas Hameed Bajwa

Deputy Director Marketing & Partnership Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi (ITACEC)

volunteers testimonial

When HDF visited our village, I started visualising myself as a social development worker. HDF supported us throughout the formation of our organisation and provided us with community & business management training to help improve grassroots level development.

Ishfaq Baloch

Volunteer/Social Worker - Tandoo Muhammad Khan