
Life of a Prisoner's Child Program
Children whose parents are in prison are often neglected, stigmatized, and face poverty, lack of education, and psychological trauma. This programs aims at transforming lives of vulnerable children, provide psychosocial support, improve school enrollment, reduce stigma, and create sustainable support systems for both children and their caregivers.

01
Provision of Psychosocial Support
Our program provides critical psychosocial support to children with imprisoned parents by creating safe, non-judgmental spaces that mitigate trauma, stigma, and social isolation. These interventions include individual or group counseling, educational assistance, mentorship programs, and structured activities that foster resilience, routine, and a sense of belonging.
02
Education Support
We are at bridging gaps in formal and vocational education for children of imprisoned parents in Uganda. Interventions include direct school fees subsidies, procurement of learning materials, and partnerships with vocational centers to end cycles of poverty and crime. By offering psychosocial support alongside academic training, we ensure that children remain in school despite the social stigma and economic instability caused by parental incarceration.


03
Prison visits
Organizing prison visits for children with incarcerated parents is vital initiative to bridge the gap caused by parental incarceration. We aim at promoting this as a protective factor that helps children cope better and promote family reunification. We aim to directly establish interactions to preserve the child-parent relationship, which is linked to better child behavior at home and school.