The genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region has killed more than 250,000 people, displaced more than 2.5 million and continues to cause 5,000 deaths each month. Building on mtvU’s ongoing campaign to inform and empower college students to help stop this crisis, MTV Networks is turning up the volume on its effort to Channel The Change across the company’s global brands. Included below are links to resources across MTV Networks and its partner organizations, where you can learn more about the genocide in Darfur and find out how you can help bring it to an end.

Think is a social networking Web community that allows users to get informed, get heard and take action on the issues that matter to them most.

mtvU gives college students the tools to get informed about and take action against the genocide in Darfur with PSAs, video clips and educational resources.

Darfur is Dying is the winning video game from the Darfur Digital Activist Contest. In this simulation, the user, from the perspective of a displaced Darfurian, tries to out-maneuver militia forces that threaten the survival of his or her refugee camp. It offers a faint glimpse of what it’s like for the more than 2.5 million people who have been internally displaced by the crisis in Sudan.

ENOUGH uses field analysis and policy advocacy to help stop and prevent genocide and other mass atrocities in Darfur and other areas around the world.

International Rescue Committee has been delivering aid to Darfur since 2004, protecting women and girls against violence, providing health care and speaking out for global action on behalf of the Sudanese people.

Mercy Corps is dedicated to improving living conditions, ensuring clean water, setting up safe spaces and providing skills training for more than 150,000 displaced people in crisis-ridden Darfur.

Ninemillion.org is a call to action from the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) with an ambitious goal: to provide an education for nine million refugee children affected by violence and conflict by 2010.

Solar Cookers International assists communities by donating solar cookers to cook food and pasteurize water, benefiting thousands of refugees who might otherwise have to walk for miles, risking danger, to collect firewood.

Women for Women International provides financial aid to female war survivors in Sudan and across the globe, helping them become self-sufficient through education, job skills training and small business development.