The mission of the Child Abuse Prevention Program is to protect children from abuse and neglect in order to promote their healthy development.
The program seeks to accomplish its mission by making grants that develop and infuse best prevention practices into normal, non-stigmatizing systems that routinely serve large numbers of families with young children (birth to age six), such as the early education and child care systems. The foundation supports prevention and early intervention efforts that educate, support, and/or assist families before an incident of abuse or neglect occurs.
The Child Abuse Prevention Program has three goals:
For information on the availability of grants for specific projects, visit the program’s Grantmaking Process & Funding Opportunities page.
As of December 31, 2008, the Child Abuse Prevention Program has approved 43 grants totaling approximately $46 million. View Grants Awarded.
Doris Duke took a special interest in the needs of children, supporting nearly 85 child welfare organizations during her life. Her support included contributions to orphanages, camps, mentor programs, little league teams, hospitals, and boys and girls clubs. In her will, Doris Duke expressed her interest in "the prevention of cruelty to children."
The CDC's "Child Maltreatment Prevention as a Public Health Priority" webinar is now available online: View Webinar
October 2009
North Carolina's Period of PURPLE Crying Program launches a new Web site: www.purplecryingnc.info
Funded in part by DDCF
September 2009
Funded in part by DDCF, the Fall 2009 edition of The Future of Children journal focuses on the prevention of child abuse and neglect. The journal is published by Princeton University and the Brookings Institution: