Objective
To realise this vision and mission we pursue an integrated, holistic agenda that reflects the best practices of world‑class civil‑society organisations:
We expand access to formal, non‑formal, and digital education—ensuring that orphans, rural girls, indigenous learners, and children with disabilities master foundational skills and progress to higher learning. We provide full‑spectrum therapeutic care through indoor rehabilitation centres, mobile therapy and assistive‑technology vans, community clinics, and online counselling platforms, so that physical, sensory, cognitive, and mental‑health needs are addressed early and continuously. Our outreach teams safeguard child rights through 24‑hour helplines, legal aid, anti‑trafficking action, and family reunification services, while our residential homes offer protection, nutrition, and pathways to mainstream reintegration for destitute children, beggars, and the homeless.
We drive economic rehabilitation by equipping women, youth, persons with disabilities, and small farmers with market‑aligned vocational skills, entrepreneurship coaching, micro‑credit linkages, and inclusive job placement, thereby translating training into real livelihoods. Environmental integrity is advanced through climate‑smart agriculture, clean‑energy adoption, solid‑waste management, and disaster‑risk‑reduction education that connect ecological health to human survival. Preventive health, sanitation, and nutrition programmes strengthen community resilience, and mental‑health services—spanning school‑based counselling to geriatric support groups—foster emotional well‑being across the lifespan.
Recognising the power of sport to transform attitudes and unleash talent, we maintain world‑class inclusive sports and recreation facilities, training athletes for Special Olympics, Para‑sports, Deaf‑sports, and Abilympics competitions at state, national, and international levels. Our research and policy wing documents grassroots realities, produces evidence‑based briefs on disability rights, child protection, health, and environment, and champions inclusive laws from village panchayats to the United Nations. We respond swiftly to floods, fires, pandemics, and other crises at home and abroad, delivering relief that is accessible to persons with disabilities and grounded in humanitarian principles of impartiality and dignity.
By weaving these objectives into a single, holistic fabric of action—stretching across all 38 districts, 534 blocks, and more than 8 000 panchayats of Bihar, throughout multiple Indian states, and through strategic partnerships in South Asia, Africa, and Southeast Asia—Child Concern advances a practical model of inclusive development that inspires communities everywhere to believe that an equitable future is both possible and within reach.
Vision
Child Concern envisions a world in which every child and every marginalised citizen—irrespective of disability, poverty, gender, caste, tribe, nationality, or geography—enjoys equal rights, holistic well‑being, and the freedom to contribute to a just, peaceful, and sustainable planet. We see communities in India and beyond where inclusive education, comprehensive health care, environmental stewardship, resilient livelihoods, and a vibrant culture of sport and creativity flourish side by side, proving that humanity’s greatest strength lies in leaving no one behind.
Mission
Our mission is to mobilise knowledge, compassion, and community power—locally, nationally, and internationally—so that children with special needs, persons with disabilities, destitute families, farmers, tribal groups, women, and elders gain the resources, protection, and opportunities they need to live with dignity and purpose. Guided by the credo “Wherever humanity calls, we respond,” we deliver seamless, evidence‑based programmes that range from classroom learning to tele‑therapy, from village sanitation drives to international advocacy for the Sustainable Development Goals and the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.