Little clarity on legality of Trump’s foreign aid shutdown one year after [FP] ↳
A year into the legal battle over the dismantling of USAID, more than a half-dozen lawsuits are still winding through the courts — repeatedly stalled by jurisdictional disputes and procedural technicalities rather than advancing to the core constitutional questions, Foreign Policy reports.
The Trump Administration is ending aid that it says saves lives [The Atlantic] ↳
Based on an internal State Department email obtained by The Atlantic, the Trump administration is moving to end all humanitarian funding to seven African countries including Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Malawi, Mali, Niger, Somalia, and Zimbabwe, canceling programs it had previously classified as lifesaving, with the stated rationale that there is "no strong nexus between the humanitarian response and U.S. national interests."
‘I fear for my daughter’s future’: Families in Zimbabwe struggle to survive a year after Trump’s aid cuts [The Independent] ↳
The Independent reports that in Zimbabwe's drought-ravaged Mwenezi district, the collapse of USAID funding has forced families to pull children out of school and survive on one meal a day, with mothers fearing their daughters will be driven into exploitative relationships with gold-panners who now flash cash in desperate communities.
Science journalism on the ropes worldwide as US aid cuts bite [Nature] ↳
Science journalism in lower-income countries is being gutted by the U.S. foreign aid freeze, with media non-profit Internews losing 95% of its $126 million government allocation and investigative networks like InfoNile seeing their budgets slashed by nearly a quarter, according to Nature.
The fight against hepatitis in Africa hangs in the balance after US cuts: Clinics closed, fewer tests and canceled research [El Pais] ↳
U.S. foreign aid cuts have dealt a severe blow to hepatitis care across Africa, forcing clinics to close, laying off more than 1,500 testing aides in Malawi alone, and disrupting medication supplies for the 72.5 million people on the continent living with hepatitis B and C, El País reports.
Afghanistan faces catastrophic hunger crisis as aid cuts force the WFP to turn away 3 in 4 children [AP] ↳
Afghanistan is experiencing the highest surge in child malnutrition ever recorded in the country, with U.S. aid cuts forcing the World Food Programme to turn away three in four of the 4 million acutely malnourished children who need treatment, the Washington Post reports.
US aid cuts fueled conflict in Africa [CGD] ↳
U.S. aid cuts have likely fueled a roughly 5% increase in armed conflict events across heavily aid-dependent countries in Africa since January 2025, according to new empirical analysis cited in this Center for Global Development blog post. The findings, drawn from real-time conflict data rather than projections, point to an estimated 1,000 additional conflict-related deaths over the course of 2025.
How bad are Trump’s aid cuts now Congress is fighting back? [The Independent] ↳
While the $51.4 billion foreign aid package recently signed by Trump has been framed as a restoration of slashed global health programs, analysis from KFF shows the 2026 global health budget remains around 6% lower than the previous year — and the contracting infrastructure that once turned funding into services has largely disappeared, reports The Independent.
Slashed by Trump, this cutting-edge HIV vaccine has a new path [NPR] ↳
According to NPR, the Trump administration's foreign aid freeze threatened to derail a cutting-edge HIV vaccine trial in South Africa — one of the countries hardest hit by the disease — before local researchers devised a new path forward.
Abandoned crops, fired scientists: Agricultural research hit by U.S. foreign aid freeze [Science] ↳
The U.S. foreign aid freeze sent shock waves through agricultural research worldwide, with workers halting data collection in sorghum and peanut test plots across Africa, seed companies going unpaid, and research coordinators at more than a dozen U.S. universities laying off staff, Science magazine shows.
“A smaller budget means you have less time to work in the field, less time for everything”: US foreign aid funding cuts one year later [GIJN] ↳
The abrupt U.S. foreign assistance freeze has pushed independent investigative newsrooms across the Global South to the brink, with Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism losing 25% of its annual budget overnight, according to this interview with ARIJ Director General Rawan Damen for the Global Investigative Journalism Network.
Disarming the global free press [Columbia Journalism Review] ↳
The abrupt end of U.S. foreign assistance for independent media—once funded largely through USAID—has devastated outlets worldwide that relied on those resources. The shift reflects a broader policy change under the Trump administration, risking not only press freedom in fragile democracies but also American strategic interests in supporting open information environments, according to the Columbia Journalism Review.
A year after aid cuts, the image of American power shifts under Trump [WaPo] ↳
According to The Washington Post, the Trump administration’s America First strategy has trickled down to what’s left of the government’s humanitarian apparatus, potentially leading to millions of deaths by 2030. At a time when more delicate approaches to the world’s ‘middle powers’ are required, opinion polls have shown tanking public approval of the United States in many countries around the world.
India's tuberculosis patients, one year after USAID's dismantling [Think Global Health] ↳
Loss of U.S. aid has caused community care interruptions that have increased the risk of drug-resistant tuberculosis in India, according to Think Global Health. Without donor-funded community programs, patients are far more likely to fall through the cracks, even when medicines are technically free, putting years of progress in reducing stigma and improving treatment completion at risk.
How US foreign aid cuts put garment worker rights on a precipice [Financial Times] ↳
According to the Financial Times, a year after the Trump administration cancelled hundreds of millions in labor rights funding, hard-won gains are now at risk. Due to cuts to USAID, the State Department and the Labor Department’s Bureau of International Labor Affairs, efforts to address some of the worst forms of human exploitation in places like Bangladesh, Indonesia, and Uzbekistan face significant setbacks.
The logical end point of ‘America First’ foreign aid [The Atlantic] ↳
Instead of being directed at where they can save the most lives, U.S. humanitarian efforts now seem to be aimed primarily at where they can advance the Trump administration’s other priorities, according to The Atlantic. This radical shift in the approach to foreign aid seems to be less grounded in past bipartisan narratives of humanitarianism or charity, and more focused on strategic engagement to advance the current administration’s goals.
Global aid cuts could lead to 9.4 million deaths by 2030, study projects [WaPo] ↳
A new Lancet study examines how the dismantling of international aid by the U.S. and other countries could undo decades of health gains, projecting up to 9.4 million extra deaths by 2030 if current conditions persist. This projection provides an early picture of how funding reductions could undo decades of health gains, leading to upsurges in HIV/AIDS, malaria and hunger across the developing world, according to The Washington Post.
US energy assistance for Ukraine stalls as winter bites [Reuters] ↳
U.S. and European officials are growing increasingly worried as hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. energy assistance promised to Ukraine remain unreleased, according to Reuters. As severe winter conditions push the nation's war‑damaged power grid to the brink, authorities fear residents will freeze to death in their own homes if aid is not delivered.
‘The urgency of it was pretty terrifying’: the Australian charities grappling with Trump’s foreign aid freeze a year on [The Guardian] ↳
The Guardian reports that a year after the Trump administration’s cuts to U.S. aid, Australian charities and development programs in the Pacific have struggled to fill the resulting gaps in funding for education, health, and food security, with some groups describing impacts that have led to preventable hardship and deaths.
“America alone” runs counter to U.S. public’s preferences for robust global engagement [Just Security] ↳
Recent U.S. foreign policy shifts toward isolationism labeled “America Alone” conflict with broad public opinion showing Americans generally support multilateral engagement, alliances, and advocating for human rights and democracy abroad, according to Just Security.

