Presentation by Connell Foley, Director of Strategy, Concern Worldwide at 2013 Global Hunger Index Launch event held at IFPRI on October 18, 2013. "The Challenge of Hunger: Building Resilience to Achieve Food And Nutrition Security".
Founded in 1997 UDYAMA primarily aims
towards strengthening and building capacities of local communities towards rejuvenating & building human, ecological,
social, economic capital rejuvenation & well-being improvement with a
view to changing the culture of cultivating solutions towards resilience
in blending with time honored improved technology transformation
with well-articulated development communication incorporating
inclusion, technological innovations to address next development
challenges of climate crisis with a broader objective to interconnect
with lives, livelihoods and lifestyle of present and for future generations
in order to link to the broader view of poverty & poverty alleviation that
goes beyond just income & food but for immunity boosting and better
nutrition to human, regenerate soil, source of food, water nutrition lifestyle. Local Action, Build on What Exists how this influences the asset base –
categorize, strategies that make up their livelihoods. An-integrated
perspective, unites the concepts of economic development with cross
sector Integration resolution for people & planet: the future we want
•Facilitate Risk Informed Development & Catalyze Agents of Change
management insulating solutions to resilience, adaptation, repurpose
•Catalyzes a systemic change an interconnected process for resilience
pathways to strengthen food system, WASH system, education system to
advance health systems with regard to economies & livelihoods for all
as climate crises are systemic & health crises are cascading now
Activity Verticals that connect community with multiple constituents:Sustainable Food Systems interlinking ecological advancement,
watersheds, Nature Based Solutions , Stream Rejuvenation , Scienceled Resilient Livelihoods, FFSs with evidences with social technology Climate Adaptation & DRR with innovation & Inclusion
interconnecting WASH, Nutrition and Environmental Education,
Health , Resilient Farming for Farmer Producer Organizations &
Women Collectives , Entrepreneurship to Minimize Distress Migration,
distress sale , Marketing & Processing , Skill building maximization Low Emission Development strategies & Carbon Credit , Carbon
minus studies & Agri-Eco-Tourism integrating with Circular
Development & Economies in Reusing, Rejuvenating , Reshaping ,
Resource base (Food , Water, Culture-Nature , Biodiversity, Green
Energy . Technology,) Partnering & Multi Stakeholder Approach in
ensuring CAB Protocols ,Vaccine readiness, health crises & Social
Protection Pathways ,wellbeing improvement & enabling environment
What is livelihood?
What is Rural Livelihood?
Importance of Rural livelihood?
how to uplift the livelihood of Rural people?
Various measures to be taken to make the lives of rural people better
Mobility map
Presentation by Connell Foley, Director of Strategy, Concern Worldwide at 2013 Global Hunger Index Launch event held at IFPRI on October 18, 2013. "The Challenge of Hunger: Building Resilience to Achieve Food And Nutrition Security".
Founded in 1997 UDYAMA primarily aims
towards strengthening and building capacities of local communities towards rejuvenating & building human, ecological,
social, economic capital rejuvenation & well-being improvement with a
view to changing the culture of cultivating solutions towards resilience
in blending with time honored improved technology transformation
with well-articulated development communication incorporating
inclusion, technological innovations to address next development
challenges of climate crisis with a broader objective to interconnect
with lives, livelihoods and lifestyle of present and for future generations
in order to link to the broader view of poverty & poverty alleviation that
goes beyond just income & food but for immunity boosting and better
nutrition to human, regenerate soil, source of food, water nutrition lifestyle. Local Action, Build on What Exists how this influences the asset base –
categorize, strategies that make up their livelihoods. An-integrated
perspective, unites the concepts of economic development with cross
sector Integration resolution for people & planet: the future we want
•Facilitate Risk Informed Development & Catalyze Agents of Change
management insulating solutions to resilience, adaptation, repurpose
•Catalyzes a systemic change an interconnected process for resilience
pathways to strengthen food system, WASH system, education system to
advance health systems with regard to economies & livelihoods for all
as climate crises are systemic & health crises are cascading now
Activity Verticals that connect community with multiple constituents:Sustainable Food Systems interlinking ecological advancement,
watersheds, Nature Based Solutions , Stream Rejuvenation , Scienceled Resilient Livelihoods, FFSs with evidences with social technology Climate Adaptation & DRR with innovation & Inclusion
interconnecting WASH, Nutrition and Environmental Education,
Health , Resilient Farming for Farmer Producer Organizations &
Women Collectives , Entrepreneurship to Minimize Distress Migration,
distress sale , Marketing & Processing , Skill building maximization Low Emission Development strategies & Carbon Credit , Carbon
minus studies & Agri-Eco-Tourism integrating with Circular
Development & Economies in Reusing, Rejuvenating , Reshaping ,
Resource base (Food , Water, Culture-Nature , Biodiversity, Green
Energy . Technology,) Partnering & Multi Stakeholder Approach in
ensuring CAB Protocols ,Vaccine readiness, health crises & Social
Protection Pathways ,wellbeing improvement & enabling environment
What is livelihood?
What is Rural Livelihood?
Importance of Rural livelihood?
how to uplift the livelihood of Rural people?
Various measures to be taken to make the lives of rural people better
Mobility map
Technical Brief: Permaculture for OVC ProgrammingAIDSTAROne
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To download & see other interactive elements of this technical brief: http://j.mp/zvHNWB
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Building Resilient Communities - Learning from TTKN integrated approach.pdf
1. 1
Building Resilient
C ommunities: Lessons from
Titukulane’s integrated approach
Fundi Kayamba-Phiri,
Strategic Learning Lead, Titukulane
2. 2
• Introduction to Titukulane
• Theory of Change
• Integration in theory
• Integration in practice and areas of enhancement
• Titukulane’s Integration Strategy
• Challenges to address
Outline
3. 3
Titukulane Overview
▪ Impact Population: 510,910 people in 159,669 HHs.
▪ Designed to support the Government of Malawi (GoM)
to implement the National Resilience Strategy
(NR S).
▪ Target group: ultra-poor and chronically vulnerable
households, with a focus on women and youth – also
referred to as "hanging in", "stepping up", and
"stepping out" households.
▪ Implementation Area: 9 out of 13 Traditional Authorities
(TAs) in Mangochi, and 10 out of 11 TAs in Zomba.
▪ Targeting strategy: leveraging existing investments
and avoiding duplication.
4. 4
C ore C onsortium Partners
C A R E – C onsortium lead; technical lead on agriculture and livelihoods, DR R , gender and
governance
Save the C hildren (SC ) – Implementation in Zomba; technical lead on nutrition, RMNC A H,
SB C and Youth
E mmanuel International (E I) – Implementation in Mangochi; technical lead on NR M
WaterA id (WA ) – Technical lead on WA S H
National Smallholder Farmers’ A ssociation of Malawi (NA SFA M) – Technical lead on market
linkages
International Food Policy Research Institute (IF PR I) – Leads learning agenda
5. 5
Theory of C hange & Priority Pathways
Activity Goal
Sustainable, equitable &
resilient food & nutrition
security for ultra-poor and
chronically vulnerable
households in Mangochi &
Zomba Districts
Purpose 1
Increased diversified
sustainable and equitable
incomes for ultra-poor,
chronically vulnerable
households, women and
youth.
Purpose 2
Nutritional status among
children under five,
adolescent girls and women
of reproductive age
improved
Purpose 3
Increased institutional and
local capacities to reduce
risk and increase resilience
among poor and very poor
households in alignment
with the NR S
Gender Equality
Governance
and
Accountability
Youth
Engagement
Environmental
Safeguarding
1. Increase and diversify
marketable production
2. Improve access to equitable
markets
3. Facilitate transitions to viable
off-farm income generating
activities
4. Increase access to capital
1. Use Social Behavior Change strategies for
Infant and young child feeding,
Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child
and Adolescent Health., nutrition and
hygiene
2. Improve water access, sanitation, and
good hygiene practices
3. Build capacity and strengthen systems
to improve health/nutrition/WASH
services at community/district levels
1. Support the Government of Malawi to
operationalize the National
Resilience Strategy
2. Increase capacity for disaster
preparedness and response at all
levels
3. Improve management of natural
resources with a focus on watersheds
Priority Pathways: Priority Pathways: Priority Pathways:
6. 6
• Routine joint monitoring visits for program quality monitoring
• To assess quality of interventions and service delivery, and identify opportunities for further integration of
purpose-specific interventions,
• Provide constructive feedback and suggestions to adapt and improve implementation strategies
• Government representation through the District Councils, DoDMA and NRS Pillar Leads
Joint monitoring for improved implementation
quality
8. 8
Purpose 1
Integration in theory
C rop &
livestock
productio
n
Small
scale
Irrigation
Village
Savings
& Loans
Micro
Enterprises
Vocation
al Skills
Training
Purpose 2
Nutrition-sensitive VC s/agriculture. Kitchen gardens, diversification - Provides nutrition-sensitive
guidance on production of nutrient rich crops to enhance nutrition for the FFBS nutrition modules.
Trained artisans are available to assist in quality and affordable latrine construction and will receive
enterprise training assistance
Sanitation marketing promotes the availability of basic sanitation options that are climate resillient,
affordable and culturally appropriate sanitation products, and will receive enterprise training
Access to formal and informal finance (VSL A/YSL A and MF I) - will (1) increase capacity to
invest in production and sales of nutritious foods, (2) increase access to income needed to purchase
nutritious foods, (3) provide a sustainable income source to lead mothers and other SBC actors, (4)
provide support for investment in WASH-related businesses and WASH infrastructure building,
operations and maintenance.
Purpose 3
On-Farm/Off-Farm livelihoods - (1) provide incentives to protect and manage NRM resources so
that they support livelihood capacities, (2) through Participatory Scenario Planning and other
community level DRM discussions, offer alternatives to livelihoods that are climate or shock sensitive
and (3) make available livelihood alternatives and opportunities for people whose livelihoods have
been impacted by shocks
Forest-based enterprises - Support income generation activities that will not harm important
ecosystems
9. 9
Purpose 1
Integration in theory
C rop &
livestock
productio
n
Small
scale
Irrigation
Village
Savings
& Loans
Micro
Enterprises
Vocation
al Skills
Training
G ender
Communities supported to reduce stigma towards women and girls in leadership positions
Women's rights to land, assets, resources, inputs and services reinforced and protected
VSLAs/YSLAs enable women, girls and boys to connect to livelihood opportunities
Women's mobility, decision making, time burden constraints recognised and addressed at HH and
community level
Youth
Youth savings groups, safe spaces, networks and microenterprise groups created , supported and
mentored
Intergenerational dialogues bring youth aspirations, perceptions and visioning into community
discourse on livelihoods, gender and social norms, governance
Youth voice and role in community leadership and decision-making reinforced
Youth engage in business opportunities around latrine construction, water point maintenance , WASH
product sales and nutrition sensitive value addition
Youth access to land, capital, technology and skills is prioritized and protected
G overnance
Systems for Agriculture, Off-farm Livelihoods, DRM , NRM and district development planning and
budgeting will be sensitive to the needs and opportunities for youth and women
Reinforcement and protection of women's and youth's rights to own and access land through MSPs.
Working with different stakeholders (civil society, state, and private sector), at different levels to
address systems level constraints (e.g. extension, funding, coordination)
10. 10
Purpose 2
Integration in theory
Water,
Health, &
Sanitatio
n
Health
&
Nutritio
n
Purpose 1
FF B S and Youth Groups - will provide entry points for: (1) SBC to enhance youth adoption of optimal health,
nutrition, WASH, family planning and reproductive health practices, (2) link youth to health, nutrition, FP/RH and WASH
services and (3) opportunities for youth to provide solutions to WASH, health and nutrition problems via innovative
business models. Provides venue for communication of production technologies for nutrition-sensitive agriculture.
Purpose 3
C ommunity Scorecard Training: In coordination with Governance and PPM&E training, increase
awareness of TA and district level health, nutrition and WASH technical services of community needs so that
they can develop the best ways of addressing them.
11. 11
Purpose 2
Integration in theory
Water,
Health, &
Sanitatio
n
Health
&
Nutritio
n
G ender
Men and Grandmothers as well as women act as key influencers for health and nutrition SBC in Care
Groups
Social Analysis and Action will be use at the community level to address key gender constraints
Women and Adolescent Girls will be provided greater access to training, skills building, employment
and business opportunities so they can earn money to purchase food
Youth
Youth will receive training and support to take on an income generating opportunity, and can use the
funds to cover the cost of education or nutritious crops
Youth will benefit from business trainings and opportunities to sell WASH products, manufacture
latrines and participate in management committees for infrastructur
G overnance
Increased capacity of DWO and DHO to monitor and respond to water quality standards
Water point committees including women and youth effectively support the reliability of water points
Collaboration and coordination for gender equitable service delivery between communities and
facilities improved
12. 12
Purpose 3
Integration in theory
Natural
Resource
Management
Disaster Risk
Management
Purpose 2
Support water access for multiple uses (watershed management) – Ensure that water maintenance and user
groups are engaged in ensuring high quality of water supply is maintained for agriculture, animal and human uses.
Ensure responses to extremely remote households: Both health/nutrition/SBC and Early Warning systems
need to be strengthened for households in remote and difficult to reach areas, which are often some of the hardest hit
with shocks.
Nutrition-sensitive NR M. Village Natural Resource Management Committees (VNRMCs) rasining fruit tree nurseries
to be distributed at household level to sustain nutrition practices
Resilience & shock mitigation/Individual and household planning - Increased capacity to adapt to, anticipate,
absorb shocks at individual and household levels will increase peoples' decisions and practices that will enhance their
health, nutrition, FP/RH and WASH related planning and related actions.
Purpose 1
.
Delineation and Mapping of watersheds - Identify watersheds where watershed activities will take place
Watershed Management - Good watershed management practices lead to increased soil fertility and productivity
resulting into food, nutrition and income security.
Forest-based enterprises - Support income generation activities that will not harm important ecosystems e.g honey
production, mushroom production
13. 13
Purpose 3
Integration in theory
Natural
Resource
Management
Disaster Risk
Management
G ender
Increased capacity of DRM structures to conduct gender-sensitive needs assessments
DRM structures use more accurate targeting that takes into account the needs of women, youth and
vulnerable groups
Improved sensitivities of CPCs and other DRM structures to the needs of women and youth as part of
their responses
Women and youth are empowered to provide honest feedback on the performance of DRM structures
Use of transformative transfers empower women and girls
Youth
DRM structures use more accurate targeting that takes into account the needs of women, youth and
vulnerable groups
Improved sensitivities of CPCs and other DRM structures to the needs of women and youth as part of
their responses
Women and youth are empowered to provide honest feedback on the performance of DRM structures
Increased productivity due to increased and protected sustainability of resources contributes to
quality of life for women and youth in vulnerable households
Youth access to land, capital, technology and skills is prioritized and protected
G overnance
Systems for Agriculture, Off-farm Livelihoods, DRM , NRM and district development planning and
budgeting will be sensitive to the needs and opportunities for youth and women
Reinforcement and protection of women's and youth's rights to own and access land through MSPs.
Working with different stakeholders (civil society, state, and private sector), at different levels to
address systems level contraints (e.g.extension, funding, coordination)
15. 15
Purpose 1
Integration in practice
C rop &
livestock
productio
n
Small
scale
Irrigation
Village
Savings
& Loans
Micro
Enterprises
Vocation
al Skills
Training
Purpose 2
Nutrition-sensitive VC s/agriculture. Integrated homestead farming- production and consumption
of nutrious foods: vegetables, poultry, etc.
Value addition and reduction of post-harvest losses – (1) reduction of losses and increased
availability of nutrient-rich foods, (2) increase nutrient content of some foods through provision of
improved seed and promotion of manure making, and (3) increased income for women and youth that
can be used to purchase more nutrient rich foods.
Purpose 3
Delineation and Mapping of watersheds - Identify watersheds where watershed activities will take
place
Forest-based enterprises - Support income generation activities that will not harm important
ecosystems e.g honey production, mushroom production
Resilience & shock mitigation/Individual and household planning - VSLAs for Cash for Work
recipients to est. businesses e.g honey
16. 16
Purpose 1
A reas to enhance integration
C rop &
livestock
productio
n
Small
scale
Irrigation
Village
Savings
& Loans
Micro
Enterprises
Vocation
al Skills
Training
Purpose 2
Access to formal and informal finance (VSL A/YSL A ) Care groups access to income needed to
sustain nutrition and WASH nutritious foods
Nutrition-sensitive agriculture. Integrated homestead farming- production and consumption of
nutritious foods: vegetables, small stock (goats and poultry), fruits etc.
- Increase vegetable production in schemes, and variety of vegetables in backyard gardens
Sanitation marketing promotes the availability of basic sanitation options that are climate resilient,
affordable and culturally appropriate sanitation products. Enterprise and employment creation for TVET
graduates.
On-Farm/Off-Farm livelihoods - Graduate care groups into MEGs as a source income to sustain
health and nutrition practices
Purpose 3
Watershed Management – Intensify construction of watershed treatments in farm fields to increase
soil fertility and productivity resulting into food, nutrition and income security.
- VSLAs for Cash for Work recipients to establish businesses e.g honey
On-Farm/Off-Farm livelihoods -Train VNRMCs as MEGs e.g. Honey, briquette production, cookstoves
G ender & Youth, G overnance, E nvironmental
safeguarding
On-Farm/Off-Farm livelihoods - Youth clubs with farm field (horticulture). Local leader buy-in to
grant youth clubs access to land for crop production
Increased enrollment of girls in male dominated skills training. Target males for female dominated skills
Access to formal and informal finance (VSL A/YSL A ) - Youth Clubs as VSLAs. Adv: TfD proceeds
Increase joint household decision making, and women's participation in leadership positions
Train micro enterprise groups on health and safety measures, especially for enterprises
using chemicals
17. 17
Purpose 2
Integration in practice
Water,
Health, &
Sanitatio
n
Health
&
Nutritio
n
Purpose 3
Participatory Scenario Planning. Inform process with recommended foods for different seasonal forecasts, and
WASH practices
G overnance
Social Accountability
18. 18
Purpose 2
A reas to enhance integration
Water,
Health, &
Sanitatio
n
Health
&
Nutritio
n
Purpose 1
Reticulated system for multi-use water supply. Effectively support Waterpoint Committees, which will
support maintenance and operations of multi-use systems, including increased quality, accessibility and reliability
Structures supporting IHF
Purpose 3
Resilience & shock mitigation - Increased capacity to adapt to, anticipate and absorb shocks at individual and
household levels. Inform development of NRM Plans to capture needs of care groups.
Participatory Scenario Planning. Inform process with recommended foods for different seasonal forecasts, and
WASH practices
G ender & Youth, G overnance
On-Farm/Off-Farm livelihoods - Youth clubs with farm field (horticulture). Local leader buy-in to grant youth
clubs access to land for crop production
Increased enrollment of girls in male dominated skills training. Target males for female dominated skills
Access to formal and informal finance (VSL A/YSL A ) - Youth Clubs as VSLAs. Adv: TfD proceeds
Increase joint household decision making, and women's participation in leadership positions
19. 19
Purpose 3
Integration in practice
Natural
Resource
Management
Resilience &
Disaster Risk
Management
Purpose 2
Use of Community Score Card approach - Train community structures on use of the Community Score Card to
enable community members to hold local structures and health service providers to account for their perfomance,
especially in reaching women, youth and remote households
Support water access for multiple uses – Construction of watershed treatments to increase water supply for
agriculture, animal and human uses.
Resilience & shock mitigation - Dyke construction has protected waterpoints from flush floods, averting
contamination; and waterbourne diseases. Watershed treatments protects farm fields and property from cyclone
impacts
Purpose 1
Participatory Scenario Planning - understanding potential future climate scenarios (short-term and long-term)
and likely impacts on various livelihoods. Informing choices of crops and agronomic practices
Resilience & shock mitigation/Individual and household planning - Dyke construction has protected
hectares under crop production
20. 20
• Purpose 3
A reas to enhance integration
Natural
Resource
Management
Disaster Risk
Management
Purpose 2
Resilience & shock mitigation - VNRMCs to increase variety of fruits tree seedling provided to households.
VNRMCs to graft fruit tree species.
Support water access for multiple uses – Construction of watershed treatments to increase water supply for
agriculture, animal and human uses.
Resilience & shock mitigation - Dyke construction has protected waterpoints from flush floods, averting
contamination; and waterborne diseases. Watershed treatments protects farm fields and property from cyclone
impacts
Purpose 1
Support water access for multiple uses – Construction of watershed treatments to increase water supply for
agriculture, animal and human uses.
21. 21
Activity Goal
Sustainable, equitable & resilient food
& nutrition security for ultra-poor and
chronically vulnerable households in
Mangochi & Zomba Districts
Purpose 1
Increased diversified sustainable and
equitable incomes for ultra-poor,
chronically vulnerable households,
women and youth.
Purpose 2
Nutritional status among children under five,
adolescent girls and women of reproductive
age improved
Purpose 3
Increased institutional and local capacities to
reduce risk and increase resilience among poor
and very poor households in alignment with the
NR S
Gender
Equality
Governance
and
Accountability
Youth
Engagement
Social
Behavior
Change
23. 23
• 10 TAs where all the 3 purposes are implemented as the first criteria
for selection of the areas for integration.
• 13 watersheds currently under development,
10 additional watersheds in the next fiscal year
• Minimum package
C atchment approach: Implementation
arrangements
VS LA
24. 24
• Randomized Control Trial – community-level treatments that contaminate control areas
within the catchment
• Complementarity with other programs
• Leverage resources
• layering and sequencing of activities
• Sustainability of the approach requires effective coordination of the NRS
• Scalability in other TAs and districts
• Human resource. Titukulane’s Program Integration Officers as key stakeholders within
the communities. Collaboration with Area Executive Committees
• Financial resources – the cost of CLA approach
Operationalization of integration
26. 26
Thank you!
This presentation was made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID).The contents are the responsibility of CARE/Titukulane and so do not necessarily reflect the
views of USAID or the United States Government.