The Global Child Health Project is a student-led, international humanitarian initiative grounded in three core pillars: Unification, Mobilization, and Impact.
We unify fragmented undergraduate passion into a coordinated movement, mobilize students across borders in partnership with trusted humanitarian organizations, and ensure measurable, ethical impact for war-affected children in the Middle East.
By focusing on education, storytelling, and partnership — not direct implementation — we convert solidarity into action while remaining apolitical, accountable, and sustainable.
Founded in 2025 by students who recognized a gap: students across campuses deeply cared about the humanitarian crisis affecting children in conflict zones, yet efforts remained fragmented, one-off, and unsustainable.
Bake sales happened. Awareness events took place. Donation drives came and went. But nothing stuck. There was no infrastructure connecting campus passion to consistent, measurable results on the ground.
GCHP was built to change that — creating a permanent, scalable infrastructure for student-led humanitarian engagement that outlasts any single event, any single semester, any single cohort of students.
Every decision we make is grounded in these core commitments — to the children we serve, the students we mobilize, and the partners we work with.
We stand apart from political affiliations. Our only allegiance is to humanitarian principles and the children who need support.
Students lead. Established humanitarian NGOs implement. Each plays to their strengths within a shared mission.
We publish what we do, how it's funded, and what it achieves. Evidence drives decisions. Accountability is non-negotiable.
We tell stories of resilience, not victimhood. Children are full human beings, and our communication reflects that always.
We build infrastructure, not events. Systems, not one-offs. GCHP is designed to grow, adapt, and endure across generations of students.
Every child deserves access to health, education, and safety regardless of where conflict has placed them. Equity is not a goal — it is the foundation.
Join a coordinated student initiative advancing child health equity across borders.