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About the Peace Corps
What is Peace Corps?

What Do Volunteers Do?

Where Do Volunteers Go?
Caribbean
Central America and Mexico
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Eastern Europe and Central Asia
North Africa and the Middle East
Africa
Asia
Pacific Islands

What's It Like to Volunteer?

How Do I Become a Volunteer?

Who Volunteers?

What are the Benefits?

What About Safety?

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Life is calling. How far will you go?

About the Peace Corps

Where Do Volunteers Go?
Africa/ namibia:

Less than two decades into its independence, Namibia has emerged as a model by establishing political and economic frameworks that give it one of the freest and most open economies in Africa. Namibians are encouraged to participate fully in shaping laws and government policies. Namibia has set a model for advancing the rule of law and encouraging the growth of civil society.

Peace Corps entered Namibia soon after it gained independence. Since the inception of Peace Corps/Namibia, education has been the focus.

Education

Immediately after Namibia's independence in 1990, the Ministry of Basic Education, Sport and Culture (MBESC) began to reform the country's educational system. The first group of Peace Corps Volunteers arrived in Namibia less than six months after independence and made substantial contributions to that reform. Currently, all Peace Corps/Namibia projects operate in collaboration with the education ministry, and the education sector is likely to continue to be a major platform from which the Peace Corps launches broader contributions to Namibia's development.

Volunteers assist with teacher training, classroom teaching, and subject matter support for teachers, especially in English, mathematics, information and communication technology (ICT), and science. Many education Volunteers initiate community activities for their students, such as establishing libraries and computer labs, boys' and girls' clubs, HIV/AIDS clubs, and computer classes for students, teachers, and the community.

Health and HIV/AIDS

All Volunteers, regardless of sector, are trained to promote HIV/AIDS awareness.

In this project, Volunteers focus on capacity building at regional and school levels. They assist with establishing HIV/AIDS clubs, organizing HIV/AIDS drama programs and conducting HIV/AIDS workshops using local and Volunteer-developed resources.

Volunteers are working with the Ministry of Health and Social Services (MOHSS) to promote awareness about a new antiretroviral HIV treatment program. The project directly supports the MOHSS by providing community-level training in sexual reproductive health, positive living, and home-based care.

 
 
 



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Find out more about what Volunteers really do? in their own words
Vital Statistics
Population Average
  2 million
 
Program Dates
  1990-present
 
Number of Volunteers
  111
 
Total Volunteers to Date
  1007
 
Languages Spoken
  Afrikaans, Oshik-wanyama, Oshindonga, Otji Herero, Rukwangali English
 
  Sources