GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
CARE International

CARE International

International humanitarian relief and development federation

SwitzerlandFounded 1945Humanitarian NGO, International Relief Federation, Poverty Reduction, Emergency Response, Gender Equality, Food Security, Health, Education, Localization and Safeguarding Governance
85
STRONG

of 100 · stable trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment

Standing

85/100

Raw Score

72/85

Confidence

82%

Evidence

Broad

About

CARE is a major humanitarian NGO whose strongest observable alignment is long-run relief delivery, poverty work, women-and-girls programming, and formal accountability architecture.

The public record supports an above-neutral, high-confidence profile: CARE has repeated public-good delivery since 1945 and clear safeguarding and transparency systems, while aid-sector risks around safeguarding, donor dependence, localization, and program effectiveness remain real pressure points.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview52%(13/25)
Contribution to Others57%(17/30)
Personal Discipline100%(13/10)
Reliability100%(15/5)
Stability Under Pressure93%(14/15)

CARE scores strongest on social care, humanitarian delivery, and resilience over time. Integrity is positive but moderated by aid-sector safeguarding, donor-dependence, and localization pressure tests.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Declared public moral framework5/5

Public mission centers poverty, dignity, humanitarian principles, and women and girls.

Mission decision alignment4/5

Long-run program history broadly aligns with stated mission, though outcome evidence is partly self-reported.

Accountability language and structure4/5

Governance, accountability, and safeguarding pages are visible and institutionally formalized.

Contribution to Others

Stakeholder welfare orientation5/5

Core work directly targets crisis-affected and poor communities.

Worker and community effects4/5

Public commitments support affected people and partners; staff and safeguarding risks require ongoing vigilance.

Public goods delivery5/5

Repeated delivery in relief, food, health, education, livelihoods, and emergency response.

Harm prevention and redress3/5

Safeguarding architecture is visible, but public evidence cannot fully verify effectiveness across all contexts.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint4/5

Localization and accountability commitments indicate restraint around institutional power.

Charitable or obligatory care5/5

Humanitarian service is the central institutional purpose.

Ethical limits under power4/5

Safeguarding and transparency policies establish ethical limits, with continued implementation risk.

Reliability

Promise keeping and contract reliability4/5

Longevity and donor-partner operations support reliability; exact project performance varies by context.

Transparency and records4/5

Public transparency and accountability materials are present.

Governance competence4/5

Federated governance model is established and publicly described.

Fair accountability to all stakeholders3/5

Aid recipients and local partners remain structurally less powerful than donors and international offices.

Stability Under Pressure

Crisis response5/5

CARE repeatedly operates in emergency and disaster contexts.

Adaptation over time5/5

Institution adapted from postwar parcels to global humanitarian and development programming.

Correction and reform under pressure4/5

Safeguarding and localization reforms are visible, with results still needing continued verification.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1945

CARE founded to deliver postwar relief packages

CARE began as a coalition of U.S. voluntary agencies sending food and supplies to families in war-torn Europe after World War II.

Created a durable humanitarian institution and the CARE Package model of direct relief.

high
1955

Expanded from European relief into global poverty and development work

After postwar emergency work, CARE broadened its mission toward food, health, education, livelihoods, and development programming outside Europe.

Shifted CARE from a single relief channel toward a long-term humanitarian and development organization.

high
1982

CARE International confederation created

CARE developed into an international confederation, coordinating member organizations and country operations through a shared humanitarian mission.

Created a more global governance structure for coordinated humanitarian and development work.

medium
2004

Indian Ocean tsunami emergency response

CARE participated in large-scale humanitarian response after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, combining immediate relief with recovery programming.

Demonstrated emergency-response capacity in a major international disaster.

high
2010

Haiti earthquake humanitarian response

CARE supported humanitarian response and recovery after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, a major test of international NGO capacity and coordination.

Delivered aid in a difficult operating environment while the wider humanitarian system faced scrutiny over coordination, accountability, and long-term recovery.

high
2018

Aid-sector safeguarding crisis heightened scrutiny of humanitarian NGOs

Following high-profile abuse and misconduct revelations in the aid sector, major NGOs including CARE faced stronger expectations to disclose cases, improve prevention, and demonstrate accountability to affected people.

CARE strengthened public safeguarding communication and transparency while the sector power-imbalance risks remained significant.

medium
2021

Localization and power-shift commitments became more explicit

CARE publicly aligned with efforts to shift humanitarian power and resources closer to local and national actors, including through localization and partnership commitments.

Signaled ethical restraint around international NGO power, though implementation remains a continuing sector challenge.

medium
2024

Continued broad emergency and development programming

CARE recent public materials show continuing work across emergency response, food and water systems, health, education, economic justice, climate, and women-and-girls programming.

Maintains global humanitarian reach and a clear public mission, with effectiveness dependent on local delivery quality, funding integrity, and safeguarding follow-through.

global

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Postwar transition from relief parcels to global development

1955

CARE had to outgrow the original Europe-focused CARE Package model.

Response: It broadened into international development and humanitarian programming.

positive_adaptation

Major disaster responses

2004

Large emergencies such as the Indian Ocean tsunami tested operational scale and coordination.

Response: CARE participated in emergency relief and recovery programs.

positive_delivery_with_coordination_risk

Aid-sector safeguarding crisis

2018

The humanitarian sector faced intense scrutiny over abuse, misconduct, and weak accountability to affected people.

Response: CARE made safeguarding and transparency commitments publicly visible.

watchpoint_with_reform_architecture

Progression

current stage

Accountability and power-sharing era: safeguarding, transparency, localization, and women-and-girls commitments are central tests.

mixed_positive

early years

Postwar relief origin: direct material relief through CARE Packages after World War II.

positive

growth years

Global expansion into anti-poverty, health, education, food, livelihood, and emergency programming.

positive

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Long-run relief delivery and poverty-focused development work
  • Public emphasis on women and girls, food security, health, education, and emergency response

Concerns

  • Safeguarding and misconduct risk inherent in aid-sector power imbalances
  • Donor dependence and localization commitments require continued verification through outcomes

Evidence Quality

6

Strong

3

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad

Draft institutional profile based on public evidence; scores measure observable institutional behavior, not hidden intention.