What We Do
Women & Families
“If you empower a woman, you empower a family, a community and a nation.”
– Paul Kagame – President of Rwanda
Resilience & Livelihoods
Rwanda has made significant progress since 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, placing strong emphasis on strengthening communities, supporting women, and enabling families to become more resilient. Aligning with this national direction, AEE Rwanda’s Resilience & Livelihoods programs are built on three core pillars: independence, autonomy, and empowerment.
Our approach focuses on helping families move away from dependency and toward sustainable self-reliance. Through skills training, financial literacy, entrepreneurship support, and strengthened community structures, we equip individuals especially women to manage their own livelihoods and meet the needs of their households.
We promote “self-help” models supported by personal development, social cohesion, and access to local systems such as government services, community groups, and lending institutions. This ensures that families are not only supported today but are empowered to thrive long into the future.
Self-Help Groups
Self-Help Groups (SHGs) are central to AEE Rwanda’s approach to grassroots development. Each group typically consists of fifteen to twenty members of similar social and economic backgrounds who live near one another and commit to a group for life. Most groups are women-only, while others are men-only or mixed.
Group members receive training on how to save—even on a minimal income—and how to provide small loans from the group for income-generating activities. In the early stages, for example, a member might take a small loan to buy bananas from a farmer and sell them at a local market. The loan is repaid, and the profit remains with the borrower. As members’ incomes grow, so do the group’s savings and opportunities to start and expand small businesses.
Beyond financial benefits, these groups also build social capital. Members meet regularly over many years, fostering trust, mutual support, and community cohesion. Over time, SHGs are supported to form clusters, which allow them to pool resources for larger cooperative projects. As the number of groups and clusters increases, clusters come together to form federations. These community-based institutions advocate on behalf of their members to local and district authorities and become trusted partners of local governments.
With a strong and stable network of self-help groups—and their associated clusters and federations—communities are well-positioned to benefit from further development interventions.
Financial and Food Security
AEE Rwanda knows from experience that financial and food security in Rwanda’s poorer communities is most effectively addressed when approached holistically. Households must have sustainable incomes to maintain progress and sufficient reserves to withstand both natural and human-caused shocks, which are not unusual within everyday Rwandan life.
AEE Rwanda’s foundational approach is based on supporting people to become self-reliant. Our programs target households with dependent children and youth struggling with finances, food security and the capacity to afford healthcare or access education opportunities. focusing on establishing the income and food security essential for the wellbeing and flourishing of children. We provide disadvantaged youth with the vocational and life skills needed to realize their potential, become valued community members, and future parents. Our agricultural programs link farmers to export markets to broaden their opportunities.
Health & Nutrition
Good health and nutrition are essential to the holistic wellbeing of children, their families, and communities. AEE Rwanda works with households that include children, adolescents, and youth up to thirty-five years of age. Through family-and community-centered programs, we implement integrated initiatives that promote behavior change and improve health outcomes.
AEE Rwanda focuses its health and nutrition programs on pregnant women, lactating mothers, and infants, monitoring both maternal and infant health through regular check-ups and community-based nursing. Our community-level programs teach mothers about balanced diets and healthcare, provide a forum for parents to share knowledge, and, through initiatives like parent-led school feeding programs and kitchen gardens, ensure that families have the resources to provide nutritious meals.
Our health programs for youth and young adults focus on sexual and reproductive health, with HIV education and prevention targeted to vulnerable groups. People with disabilities are often excluded from education and employment opportunities due to their disabilities.
AEE Rwanda offers screening and referral to specialist services for children, youth, and young adults with disabilities. We collaborate with schools to promote inclusive education for all children and support youth with disabilities in acquiring employable skills.
Community Health Workers
Our community health workers are the mainstay of our projects. These are local people solving local problems. Drawn from the communities in which they work, community health workers are trained through AEE Rwanda projects to identify issues, collaborate with project participants on long-term solutions, and refer people to health services when necessary.
Pregnant & Lactating Women
Every child deserves to be born and raised in good health. AEE Rwanda supports mothers and mothers-to-be through programs that provide access to antenatal and post natal education and care. We also assist breastfeeding mothers with guidance, training, and connections to healthcare services when needed. A balanced, nutritious diet is essential for pregnant women and new mothers. AEE Rwanda’s nutrition programs equip women with the knowledge and resources to prepare healthy meals for themselves, their babies, and their families.
Infant Health
AEE Rwanda works with early childhood centers, health centers, and community health workers to screen infants for stunting, malnutrition, and developmental issues. Infants with serious conditions are referred to local health services; however, most issues—especially nutritional ones—are addressed through community health workers and volunteers, who work closely with parents to ensure a balanced diet
Sexual & Reproductive Health
Adolescents and youth should understand and exercise their sexual and reproductive rights and health. AEE Rwanda projects educate both female and male youth on sexual health and rights through mixed-gender and female-only safe-space groups. Mentors and linkage facilitators act as trusted advisors and can refer youth to health services when needed. Anti-gender-based violence (GBV) prevention is a key component of AEE Rwanda’s projects for all age groups
HIV
AEE Rwanda works to reduce new HIV infections and empower people with HIV to live full lives. Our projects mobilize at-risk youth and communities to know their HIV status through regular testing. Community health workers and linkage facilitators assist HIV + youth in accessing available services and collaborate with local health facilities to reduce stigmatization, creating an environment conducive to treatment adherence. At-risk young women are enrolled in pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) programs to reduce their risk of HIV infection. Young men are encouraged to consider voluntary medical male circumcision, a procedure shown to significantly lower their risk of infection
Gender Equality & Social Inclusion
AEE Rwanda works to eliminate discrimination based on gender, disability, or other social categories. Discrimination can take the form of unfair access to education or other social and emotional goods, as well as gender-based violence (GBV). AEE Rwanda conducts community-based campaigns against GBV. These include education on rights and responsibilities, including sexual and reproductive health decisions, as well as grassroots initiatives such as commissioning local groups to write and perform short plays or dances at significant local events that illustrate the problems of and solutions to GBV.