Oxfam CEO and President Abby Maxman on prolonged crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo, now exacerbated by the recent ...
Someone in the richest 1% of the U.S. has used over 27 times more of the carbon budget than someone in the poorest 50% of the U.S. since 1990 Since 1990, the richest 0.1% increased their share of ...
As the US and other Western countries rush to secure access to critical minerals, companies face pressure to move quickly and dispense with environmental and social protections. This briefing note ...
Ameera, an entrepreneur from Rafah, walks to her workplace where she cooks food for people displaced by the war. Photo: Alef Multimedia/Oxfam Here’s how you can help people in Gaza recover from the ...
What is happening in Gaza? The announcement of an agreed first-stage ceasefire in Gaza is welcome news after two years of fighting – as is the release of Israeli hostages and unlawfully detained ...
Oxfam partners are trying to get food, clean water, and medicine to desperate families. Here’s the latest, and what you can do to help. Getting humanitarian aid into Gaza is a complicated mess—but it ...
Palestinians displaced by conflict in Gaza walk to Jabalia, an area heavily damaged since the war began in October 2023, after the ceasefire was announced in early October 2025.. People across the ...
This report outlines how global inequality is shockingly entrenched and vast, with the number of billionaires having doubled in the last decade. The report also shows how our sexist economies are ...
The level of economic inequality in the city of Santiago in Brazil is evident along the border of a high-density, low-income favela neighborhood next to high-rise ...
New research reveals that nearly a third of all workers in the US earn under $15 an hour. But women and people of color do much more than their fair share of low-wage jobs, and as wages lose value, it ...
Irregular rainfall and drought in Mali has significantly reduced Satou Coulibaly’s millet and groundnut harvest in recent years. “It's getting harder and harder to get enough to eat," she says.
For decades, the largest US corporations have been driving the inequality crisis, actively concentrating power and money in the hands of wealthy CEOs and shareholders while limiting the power of ...