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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
South America
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/ Swaziland:

In 2003, the Peace Corps returned to Swaziland after an eight-year absence. The Peace Corps was first invited to work in Swaziland in 1969, a few months after the country gained independence from Great Britain.

Health and HIV/AIDS

The greatest single problem confronting the people of Swaziland is the HIV/AIDS pandemic. As of 2005, the infection rate of adults (ages 15 to 49) was 42.6 percent, giving Swaziland the highest HIV rate in the world. In addition, approximately 70,000 children have been orphaned as a result of AIDS.

The Peace Corps assists the government of the Kingdom of Swaziland in implementing its national strategy on HIV/AIDS risk reduction and impact mitigation. This includes training teachers and community members in life skills aimed at HIV/AIDS prevention, initiating and promoting programs in HIV/AIDS awareness, identifying partnerships and resource alliances to fight the epidemic, strengthening existing HIV/AIDS intervention strategies and activities, mobilizing communities to respond to the effects of HIV/AIDS, and working with in-school and out-of-school youth.

 



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Find out more about what Volunteers really do? in their own words
Vital Statistics
Population Average
  1 million
 
Program Dates
  1969-1996, 2003-present
 
Number of Volunteers
  42
 
Total Volunteers to Date
  1,335
 
Languages Spoken
  SiSwati, Zulu
 
  Sources