Supported by WeSeeHope, we work with street connected youth and children to enhance their socio-economic resilience. To facilitate rehabilitation, we organize the youth into associations of 20 members, through which we build their capacities, thereby reducing their indulgence in drugs and substance abuse, crime, among other irresponsible behavior. Similarly, to reduce the propensity of street leaning children to streetism, we organize children into Community Child Right Clubs where they are taken through child protection. We work with their parents, most of whom reside in some of the most disadvantaged informal settlements, by introducing them to the Village Savings and Loaning model to enhance their financial resilience and capacities to provide for the basic rights of their children. The targeted parents are those whose children are enrolled with the Community Child Rights Clubs (CCRCs).