From 1975 to 1979, the Khmer Rouge regime killed nearly two million people in Cambodia and destroyed the nation’s schools—being educated was a crime. Today, education is a priority for Cambodia. But its school system remains plagued by illiteracy and high dropout rates, particularly among women and girls.
It hasn’t helped that books are out of reach for many Cambodians: pricey, tough to transport, susceptible to damage. Even schools and public libraries have trouble stocking the shelves with up-to-date texts in good physical quality. Plus, the few books that are available are rarely printed in Khmer, the country’s native language.
But nearly a third of Cambodians own mobile devices these days. So it only makes sense to start thinking of reading material as mobile, too. Check out this slideshow to find out how The Asia Foundation’s Books for Asia program, in partnership with Library For All, is seeking scalable solutions to Cambodia’s lack of accessible books through a program called Let’s Read!
All images courtesy Asia Foundation
















Man standing on concrete wall.Photo credit
The Pantheon in Rome and Hong Kong at sunrise.Photo credit
Windmills and green grass.
Time lapse of blue skies over a solar field. 
A Shiba Inu smiles at the cameraCanva
A Japanese sunfish swims in a an aquariumCanva

A fast food employee hands over a bag of food to a drive-thru customerCanva
Gif of Ronald McDonald losing his hat via
A fancy turkey dinnerCanva

Jeff Bridges at Comic Con.Photo by Gage Skidmore via