Tuesday, December 23, 2025

2025 Annual Report :The Year the Project Transitioned into an Organisation

 


Introduction

The year 2025 marked a defining turning point for the Inclusive Family Alliance. What began as the Special Mothers Project evolved into a fully registered organisation with a clear mandate: to amplify the voices of parents and caregivers of children with disabilities, with a special focus on cerebral palsy, and to advocate for policies that recognise and support their lived realities.

This report highlights the milestones, advocacy efforts, collaborations, and impact achieved during this transformational year.

From Project to Organisation

At the beginning of 2025, the Inclusive Family Alliance operated as a project focused on broad advocacy for children with cerebral palsy and their families, often collaborating with like-minded organisations to advance inclusion.

In April 2025, with the support of the Ghana Federation of Disability Organisations (GFD), the project secured funding to formalise its governance structure. A Board was constituted, bringing together individuals committed to guiding the organisation’s vision and growth.

At this inaugural board meeting, a landmark decision was taken:
the transition of the Special Mothers Project into the Inclusive Family Alliance as a formal organisation dedicated to advancing the inclusion of parents and caregivers of children with disabilities.

All statutory documentation was completed, and the Inclusive Family Alliance is now registered as an organisation limited by guarantee, operating as a social enterprise.

Our Mission

To advocate for the inclusion of parents and caregivers of children with cerebral palsy in policy formulation processes and to push for policies that recognise unpaid care work and address the needs of families of persons with disabilities.

Governance
The Inclusive Family Alliance is overseen by a Board of Directors responsible for strategic direction, oversight, and accountability.



Strengthening Institutional Capacity

Throughout 2025, the Inclusive Family Alliance remained an affiliated member of the Ghana Federation of Disability Organisations (GFD). Through this affiliation, the organisation actively participated in several capacity-building programmes aimed at strengthening disability-focused advocacy in Ghana.

 These included training workshops on:

  • Mobilisation and data collection
  • Effective advocacy strategies
  • Leadership and organisational development

These engagements enhanced the Alliance’s ability to operate strategically and contribute meaningfully to national disability discourse.

In recognition of its leadership, the Executive Director of the Inclusive Family Alliance, together with other parents of children with special needs, was tasked by the GFD to spearhead the formation of a National Association of Parents and Caregivers of Persons with Disabilities—a critical step toward unified national advocacy.

Advocacy on Unpaid Care Work

Advocacy for the recognition of unpaid care work emerged as a major focus area in 2025.

The Inclusive Family Alliance was nominated by the GFD to participate in a workshop organised by NETRIGHT Ghana on unpaid care work. This engagement led to participation in three additional follow-up workshops, all aimed at influencing policy discussions and promoting recognition of the economic and social value of care work performed largely by parents especially mothers of children with disabilities.

Further advocacy engagements included:

  • Participation in a policy dialogue organised by the Centre for Learning and Childhood Development
  • Representation and speaking engagement at a continental webinar organised by the Caregivers Empowerment Network Africa (CENet Africa), where caregivers across Africa shared lived experiences to push for research-driven policies at the African Union level

In a significant milestone, CENet Africa appointed the Inclusive Family Alliance Lead, Mrs. Hannah Awadzi, to its Board. CENet Africa will lead a review of existing unpaid care work policies across Africa and propose new frameworks informed by research and lived experiences.



Media Engagement and Capacity Building

Recognising the media as a powerful tool for social change, the Inclusive Family Alliance prioritised media engagement in 2025.

In collaboration with the Empowering Better Life Foundation (EBLF), the Alliance trained approximately 20 media professionals on ethical and effective reporting on issues affecting children with disabilities and their families.

To deepen impact, the Alliance also conducted one-on-one mentorship sessions with selected journalists who demonstrated strong interest in disability reporting. These journalists were supported to develop compelling, accurate, and human-centred stories that challenge stigma and influence public perception.

 Public Speaking and Lived Experience Advocacy

Throughout 2025, the Inclusive Family Alliance actively engaged in public speaking as a core advocacy strategy. Parents and caregivers, including the organisation’s leadership, shared their lived experiences at forums, workshops, dialogues, and webinars. These engagements created spaces where personal narratives highlighted the daily realities of caregiving, exposed systemic gaps in service delivery, and challenged prevailing misconceptions about disability and care work.

By centring lived experience in public discourse, the Alliance strengthened calls for systemic and policy-level change. These speaking engagements moved conversations beyond theory, grounding advocacy in real-life evidence that resonated with policymakers, civil society actors, development partners, and the media. Public speaking thus became a powerful tool for influencing attitudes, shaping narratives, and reinforcing the urgency of inclusive, care-sensitive policies that respond to the needs of families of persons with disabilities.

Office Space

The Inclusive Family Alliance benefitted from a shared office space provided by the GFD for four of its member organizations.





 Media-Based Advocacy

The Inclusive Family Alliance continues to leverage traditional and digital media as a strategic advocacy tool. Through interviews, features, and storytelling, the organisation amplifies the voices of parents and caregivers and pushes for systemic and policy-level change that supports families of persons with disabilities.

 Direct Support and Donations

In 2025, the Inclusive Family Alliance received individual donations that provided critical support to families in urgent need.

These funds were used to:

  • Assist parents with hospital bills
  • Provide emergency food support to families facing acute hardship

Additionally, in collaboration with the GFD and the Association of Parents and Caregivers of Persons with Disabilities, the Alliance donated food items and sanitary supplies to the Dodowa Association of Parents and Caregivers, reinforcing solidarity and mutual support within the disability community.



 Looking Ahead: The Way Forward

As the Inclusive Family Alliance moves forward, it remains committed to:

  • Advocating for the meaningful inclusion of parents and caregivers in policy design and implementation
  • Pushing for care-sensitive policies that recognise unpaid care work

With adequate resources, the organisation plans to:

  • Organise media training workshops for journalists in Accra, Kumasi, Bono, and the Northern Regions
  • Empower parents and caregivers to become effective advocates for themselves and their children
  • Collaborate with the Association of Parents and Caregivers of Persons with Disabilities to mobilise parents nationwide and conduct advocacy and leadership workshops
Leadership and External Recognition

In 2025, the advocacy work of the Inclusive Family Alliance received notable external recognition. The organisation’s Lead Mrs Hannah Awadzi was honoured by the Ghana Federation of Disability Organisations (GFD) with a Child Rights Activism Award, acknowledging sustained advocacy for the rights and inclusion of children with disabilities and their families.

 In the same year, she was also recognised as the Most Outstanding Female Journalist at the Ghana Women’s Awards. These reflect the growing visibility and credibility of lived-experience-led advocacy and have further strengthened the Alliance’s capacity to influence public discourse, media narratives, and policy conversations at national and regional levels.

Note of Gratitude

The Inclusive Family Alliance extends its heartfelt appreciation to all individuals, partners, and organisations who supported our work throughout 2025.



Your generosity provided relief to families in crisis, strengthened our advocacy efforts, and helped lay the foundation for a stronger, more inclusive movement. We are equally grateful to the media professionals who partnered with us to elevate the voices of parents and caregivers of children with disabilities.

Together, we are building a future where no caregiver is invisible and no family is left behind.

No comments:

Post a Comment