Resource Library
Good decisions require good data and information. Search the Resource Library for data and policy products on population, health, and environment issues. Browse collections, explore policy briefs, watch videos, and put the data in context.
Project: PROPEL Health
Localizing WHO Guidelines on Self-Care: A Practical Guide From Uganda
This how-to guide documents Uganda’s approach to developing and testing a self-care guideline, and illuminates a five-phase process that may be helpful for other countries looking to nationalize the WHO guideline.
Project: Breakthrough RESEARCH
Exploring Pathways to Social and Behavior Change Impact
Social and Behavioral Change ( SBC) intervention can increase modern contraceptive use depends on existing behaviors and attitudes, the effectiveness of the intervention, and how much the intervention is scaled up.
Family Planning and the Path to Resilience
When a family is faced with a major disaster, how well are they able to respond? Can they find work? Feed everyone? Stay healthy? This interactive feature and policy brief address those questions.
Project: IDEA: Informing Decisionmakers to Act
Building Resilience Through Family Planning: A Transformative Approach For Women, Families, and Communities
In many developing countries, chronic poverty, repeated economic and environmental shocks, and poor health—including lack of access to and use of modern contraceptives—contribute to recurring cycles of crisis.
Project: IDEA: Informing Decisionmakers to Act
Rapport.Vers Une Plus Grande Résilience Grâce À La Planification Familiale
Project: IDEA: Informing Decisionmakers to Act
Vers Une Plus Grande Résilience Grâce À La Planification Familiale : Une Approche Transformatrice Qui S’adresse Aux Femmes, Aux Familles Et Aux Collectivités
Project: Evidence Project
Working Paper. The Impact of Population, Health, and Environment Projects: A Synthesis of the Evidence
(2015) A new working paper by the Evidence Project synthesizes the available research from the latest generation of population, health, and environment (PHE) projects, providing a detailed account of the benefits of integrated projects and gaps in the evidence base.